Unforgettable Moments: Panthera’s 2024 Photo Highlights

By Panthera

Cellphone with images of wild cats
© PANTHERA

Panthera is excited to release our third annual selection of the most awe-inspiring photos of the year showcasing the wild cats we are working to save and the people who protect them, as just featured by My Modern Met

From a cheetah cub nestling under its mother seeking shelter from the wind to an Asian golden cat wrestling a snake, each image is a window into the wild and the heart of Panthera’s mission.

As wild cats across the globe continue to face threats from poaching, biodiversity loss, wildfires, and other climate change-related risks, these photos remind us of not just the beauty of these animals, but the importance of protecting them.

Join us as we reflect on Panthera’s Best of 2024 through the lens of conservation in action (in no particular order!).

1. Curious Cubs in Zambia 

Two lion cubs
© Panthera 

Two male lion cubs, estimated to be 12-18 months old, inspect a camera trap in Mufunta Game Management Area (GMA) bordering the western boundary of Zambia's Kafue National Park. These two males were photographed with a lioness, which is likely their mother. 
 
In 2023, Panthera was thrilled to share that counter-poaching operations and innovative technological advances, including ‘vulture sentinels,’ have helped triple leopard density and increase lion numbers in parts of Kafue. 
 
Panthera Lion Program Director, Dr. Andy Loveridge, said it best, “Long known as one of Africa’s most biodiverse protected areas, Kafue National Park’s lion and leopard populations were diminished largely due to bushmeat poaching. However, as a result of this uniquely collaborative conservation program steered by Zambia’s DNPW, these wild cat populations have started to stabilize and even increase in some parts of the National Park. Approaches such as this provide hope for successful conservation of leopards and lions across southern Africa.” 

2. Don't Blow Away 

Cheetah cub and mom
© Alexander Botha

A cheetah cub seeks shelter from the wind in Phinda Private Game Reserve, South Africa.

3. Genevieve and Her Kitten 

Female puma and kitten
© Matt Mahen 

A female cougar nicknamed Genevieve stands behind her nearly one-year-old kitten on Washington's Olympic Peninsula. In this landscape, high-definition remote cameras and GPS collars provide a window into the secret world of cougars, unveiling where the species travels and why, what they eat, how they raise their young, interactions between pumas and bobcats and how the species navigate through a mosaic of human-dominated lands. 
 
The Olympic Cougar Project (OCP) is a large-scale, multi-national collaborative effort to assess and increase cougar connectivity in western Washington State where these big cats have lower genetic diversity than in other areas of the state. Given conflict over livestock is the biggest source of cougar deaths in the region, the OCP also aims to facilitate co-existence between cougars and human communities through various education and community outreach initiatives. 
 
Adopting a community approach rarely seen in the United States that extends across state and tribal nation boundaries, the OCP is carried out by Panthera and the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe alongside multiple other tribal nations

4. Big Meals for Big Cats 

Tiger eating deer
© Thailand DPKY/Panthera 

A tiger carries prey, a sambar deer, in the Dong Phayayen-Khao Yai Forest Complex of Thailand. Sambar deer are among the most favored prey of tigers. Tigers often bypass smaller prey in favor of these larger animals, maximizing energy efficiency in their hunting efforts. Tigers play a vital role in maintaining the health of deer populations by preying on sick individuals. This natural selection process helps strengthen the genetic traits of the deer population over time. 

5. Mgiba, a Celebrity Leopard in Sabi Sands 

Leopard on a rock
© Panthera/Nikki Balme 

Mgiba, a young female leopard rests on a fallen tree trunk in South Africa's Sabi Sand Nature Reserve. 
 
Panthera's Sabi Sands Leopard Project proudly stands as the lengthiest and most comprehensive leopard research study ever undertaken. It encompasses three private reserves (the Sabi Sand Nature Reserve, Mala Mala Game Reserve and Sabie Game Reserve), where Panthera researchers have studied, monitored and gained a better understanding of leopard behavior using this unique population since 2009. 
 
Due to the well-protected environment and sensitive viewing practices, leopards in the reserve have become comfortable around vehicles. Because of this, leopard sightings are frequent and safari guides can identify and monitor up to 85 resident leopards using their unique spots and established territories. Panthera has trained safari guides to act as citizen scientists, using their photo-tourism sightings as biological data that ultimately inform the conservation of at-risk leopard populations in other regions. 
 
Mgiba was born in July 2023 to the Ntsumi female in southern Sabi Sands. She was part of a litter of two, and both her and her sister Kurhula reached independence a few months ago, which is noteworthy in the reserve as leopard cub mortality is high. Although they are independent of their mother, they are still found in her natal territory, sometimes together and sometimes apart, as they begin to support themselves. Their father is likely the Nweti male, as he is the dominant territory holder in the area and was seen mating with Ntsumi prior to the birth of the cubs. 

6. La Escuela Jaguar: Roaring in School Encouraged 

Children in jaguar masks with teacher
© Panthera 

 The Jaguar School, or La Escuela Jaguar, is a remarkable learning project in Colombia dedicated to inspiring children to appreciate jaguars. By engaging them through various interactive activities such as art, music, games, and even statistics lessons, our young students learn why jaguars are so crucial to Colombia’s ecosystems and the world at large. The Jaguar School is implemented where people live in close proximity to jaguars and other wildlife. The Jaguar School is creating new opportunities for vulnerable jaguars and the surrounding community through its efforts. 
 
Since 2009, more than 1,300 children and youth have been taught the importance of wild cats and their conservation. 

7. The Gijima Lions 

Lion in field
© Panthera/Nikki Balme 

A male lion rests in the grass in South Africa's Sabi Sand Nature Reserve. This male is part of a coalition of two called the Gijima males that moved into the Sabi Sands from Kruger National Park. The coalition originally included three males, but one was killed by another dominant male lion coalition in the area. The duo now holds territory in the southern Sabi Sands that encompasses the Msuthu, Styx and Southern prides, and they are frequently seen with the prides. 

8. Puma Poaching in (Argentinian) Patagonia 

House cat next to poached puma skins
© Panthera/Nicolas Lagos 

A collection of skins of pumas and culpeo fox killed in Santa Cruz Province, Argentina. Sport hunting of pumas and foxes in this Province of Argentinean Patagonia is legal, allowing hunters to take a puma per week. On the other side of the border in Chile, pumas are legally protected, although retaliatory killing is still a common management strategy among ranchers as a way to protect their livestock. 
 
In Chile, Panthera works to resolve human-cat conflicts that have persisted for more than a century in the Magallanes Region, with a replicable model for other ranches in Patagonia. Amongst other conservation efforts in the country, our approach involves the use of non-lethal alternatives for the protection of domestic livestock, such as light deterrents and livestock protection dogs. 

9. Asian Golden Cat vs. Snake 

Asian golden cat fighting a snake
© Panthera/Pahang Biodiversity Council/DWNP/Enggang 

An Asian golden cat battles a snake in Malaysia's Al-Sultan Abdullah Royal Tiger Reserve. This species is classified as 'Vulnerable' by the International Union for Conservation of Nature while its cousin, the African golden cat, is considered Endangered. 

10. Spotlight on the Bobcat 

Bobcat
© Panthera/Matt Mahen 

An adult bobcat examines Panthera's camera trap on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington. 
 
Bobcats are one of four extant felid species in the lynx genus. Bobcats are the most widely distributed and abundant felid in North America, with a range spanning from southern Canada through most of the contiguous United States (except Delaware) to Oaxaca in Mexico. Bobcats are perhaps best known for their distinctive facial ruffs and black and white tufted ears. Although sometimes confused with house cats, these felines are on average two to three times the size of a domestic pet. 
 
Bobcats are very adaptable and can live in a wide range of habitat types including woodland areas, humid swamps, deserts, and urban environments. Vital for controlling pests, bobcats often prey on rodents, rabbits and hares, but they can also prey on large mammals such as whitetail deer. Despite their adaptability, bobcats are threatened by habitat loss. Increased development and urbanization are disrupting bobcat dispersal and survival. Bobcats also face intensive hunting pressure as there is high demand for their skins from China and Russia. Bobcats are also increasingly threatened by pollutants, including poisons used to target rodents. However, despite these threats, bobcats are not threatened with extinction and their population status remains generally stable. 

11. Dogs Helping Wild Cats 

Woman with dog looking at forest
© Ben Riopelle 

Panthera K9 Research Assistant Fatima Germani and her 6-year-old male Belgian Malinois, Phiri, (also known as Phiri Dog and Baby) admire the view after successfully completing a training exercise. Phiri is a tracking dog trained to detect snares and camps of poachers in Terengganu Forest, Malaysia, where Panthera carries out antipoaching and monitoring efforts on behalf of tigers and other wild cats. He had just successfully found a day-old mock poacher's camp when this photo was taken. 

13. Honduras' Unknown Jaguars 

Jaguar in the forest
© Panthera & Re:wild 

One of the jaguars initially discovered in 2020 that now makes up a previously unknown population in the proposed La Danta Wildlife Refuge, Honduras. During the past two years, the Honduran government (ICF), Municipalities of Jutiapa and Olanchito, SERSO, BTSA, Panthera and Re:wild have been working alongside local communities to establish La Danta Wildlife Refuge as a protected area. Below this region lives a community of 100,000 people who are fed water from the rivers in La Danta. There’s no question that protecting wild cats like jaguars, their prey and their habitats can help keep ecosystems safe and help protect the quality of critical ecosystem services, like water, benefitting the health of people and so many other living beings. 

13. A Flat-Headed Photo for the Books 

Flat-headed cat walking on leaves
© Sabah Forestry Department/Sabah Wildlife Department/Panthera 

An Endangered flat-headed cat (Prionailurus planiceps) roams the swampy area of the Tangkulap Forest Reserve, Sabah, Malaysian Borneo
 
On the island of Borneo, Panthera works through Project Dupot to monitor and protect the Sunda Clouded Leopard (Neofelis Diardi) and other Bornean wild cats and their prey in the Deramakot Core Area, a mixed-use landscape in Sabah. Using counter-poaching strategies developed for this region, we work closely with the Sabah Forestry Department, Sabah Wildlife Department, as well as the Keramuak Community Rangers to increase the level of security across the Deramakot landscape. 

14. A Stunning Arabian Leopard Profile 

Profile of leopard
© Frederic Uhel-PANTHERA-RCU 

A female Arabian leopard at the Arabian Leopard Conservation Breeding Centre in Taif, Saudi Arabia. Scientists estimate that only 120 Arabian leopards remain in the wild. The Royal Commission for AlUla, with the help of Panthera, is conserving the Critically Endangered species and working toward its eventual reintroduction into the wild. 

15. Nature’s Umbrellas 

Rangers in the forest using large leaves to protect themselves from the rain
© Panthera Thailand 

Phu Teoy National Park rangers, equipped with natural umbrellas, are conducting a survey as part of ongoing wild cat conservation efforts between Panthera, the government of Thailand and other partners. Despite being a protected area at the edge of the forest complex and serving as a buffer zone, Phu Teoy has remarkably recorded tigers in the area. The discovery of the first tiger in this area is an exceptional and noteworthy case. 

16. As the Pantanal Burns, Saseka Seeks Refuge 

Jaguar in the wetlands
© Panthera/Raíssa Sepulvida 

Immersed in the raw wild of the Brazilian Pantanal, a female jaguar known as 'Saseka' rests. This photo was taken during wildfires in the Pantanal, which have become an annual 'new normal' for the region. At least 17 million vertebrates are estimated to have been killed immediately by wildfires that burned a quarter of the Brazilian Pantanal in 2020, according to a study from the Mogu Mata Network, coordinated by Embrapa Pantanal and ICMBio/CENAP, in which Panthera actively participated. 

17. New Tiger Life for Thailand 

Tiger cub and mom walking
© Thailand DPKY/Panthera 

Taken less than two weeks before the start of 2024 in Thailand's Dong Phayayen Khao Yai Forest Complex, we snuck this camera trap shot of a tigress and her cub into our 2024 collection due to its raw beauty and the significance of new life for the future of the Endangered tiger. This cub is estimated to be two to three months old - an exciting time of life when cubs begin to explore the world with their mothers. 

18. Akira of the Andes 

Ocelot in the forest
© Panthera 

'Akira' is a female ocelot that has been monitored for several years in the Andes region of Colombia where Panthera carries out a multitude of wild cat conservation initiatives. In 2023, she was fixed with a GPS collar to study her movements, and in 2024 we obtained camera trap photos of her activities. Photos show her to be in good health and even captured her carrying a rodent in her mouth. 

19. Melanism in Malaysia

Black jaguar in the forests of Malaysia
© Panthera/Pahang Biodiversity Council/DWNP/Enggang 

A melanistic leopard in Malaysia's Al-Sultan Abdullah Royal Tiger Reserve. Nearly all leopards on the Malay Peninsula are black. Their color comes from a genetic mutation that causes an overproduction in the dark pigment melanin, which results in black fur coats
 
The Malay Peninsula is one of the last strongholds for the Indochinese leopard. Some believe that black leopards (or panthers) are better concealed than lighter-colored leopards in the dense canopies of the region’s rainforests, making them more effective at stalking prey. 
 
We’re monitoring the black leopard's population trends in the landscape and working alongside the Malaysian government to improve protection measures. These leopards are highly sought after by the illegal wildlife trade and often fall prey to poachers' wire snares. 

20. A Cloudie with its Head in the Clouds

Clouded leopard at night, yawning in the forest
© Panthera/Pahang Biodiversity Council/DWNP/Enggang 

A sleepy clouded leopard ambles in front of our camera traps in Malaysia's Al-Sultan Abdullah Royal Tiger Reserve. En route to catch the next catnap! 

21. Fusing Faith and Conservation 

Women wearing fake leopard hats singing and dancing
© Jabulani Mkhize 

As part of a remarkable program fusing faith and conservation, Panthera, the global wild cat conservation organization, has joined forces with the one-million-member African Congregational Church (ACC) to expand the Furs for Life program (FFL) – a decade-long initiative to reduce the killing of wild leopards in southern Africa. Representing the third FFL partnership with a Church or Royal Establishment, the latest alliance will reduce demand for authentic leopard skins, save significant leopard lives and bring economic benefits to local women often income-dependent on the illegal wildlife trade. 
 
The new initiative will replace the Church’s ceremonial regalia – hats traditionally made from authentic leopard fur – with a synthetic, longer-lasting and cheaper alternative known as “Heritage Fur.” One significant goal is to provide an alternative source of income for women reliant on tailoring illegally sourced wildlife products and increase their skills training, including business management, that will enable independent operation of tailoring micro-enterprises. Thus far, Panthera has provided 20 sewing machines and tables, equipment and 280 hours of training to twenty women from the South Africa-based African Congregational Church to tailor thousands of Heritage Fur hats and other garments, including school uniforms, in high demand outside of the Church. 

22. Is the Marbled Cat the New Grumpy Cat? 

A marbled cat hissing in the forest
© Panthera/Pahang Biodiversity Council/DWNP/Enggang 

A startled marbled cat hisses at the camera in Malaysia's Al-Sultan Abdullah Royal Tiger Reserve. 
 
Mostly arboreal and often only detected by our cameras on trails along high elevation ridgelines, the marbled cat is among some of the more elusive cat species. This individual is challenging the Pallas' Cat for the title of World's Grumpiest Cat. 

23. Your Move, Camera! 

Howler monkey in a tree, yelling
© Panthera & Inter-American Development Bank Ministry of Transportation 

A howler monkey bravely challenges a camera trap in Costa Rica, where Panthera works to connect and protect wild cats in and beyond the nation's borders - including jaguars, pumas, ocelots, jaguarundis, margays, and oncillas. 
 
As part of Panthera's Wild Cat Friendly Roads Project, camera traps are placed both in trees and in and around roads to assess how wildlife are using natural and manmade arboreal crossings, underpasses and culverts. These data help inform the construction of structures like underpasses in wildlife crossing hotspots, saving the lives of wildlife and reducing collisions. 

24. Wild at Heart 

Back of people with "Wild at Heart" printed on their t-shirts, looking off in the distance
© Panthera 

Panthera's Thailand team supports the #WildAtHeart campaign to spotlight wild cats and the incredible impacts they have on our shared ecosystems. 

As we close out the year and celebrate our accomplishments, there’s still time to make a difference for wild cat conservation in 2025 and beyond. From November 22 to December 31, 2024, all tax-deductible donations will be matched dollar-for-dollar by The Ayers Wild Cat Conservation Trust.

Home is where the habitat is — and your generous support will help ensure a thriving future for wild cats and the critical landscapes they call home. Together, we can make an even greater impact. Save wild cats today!

See our 2023 and 2022 photo collections here.