“…Local uses have rarely been systematically studied or measured to determine their actual scale and impacts on big cats, their sustainability, or legality. In reality, their cumulative offtake levels may exceed the capacity of big cat populations, and their trade chains may quickly extend beyond national and legal boundaries (Coals et al, 2022). For example, the illegal harvest of jaguar body parts by rural and Indigenous communities for personal use and trade within family and community circles for subsistence, medicinal, and cultural reasons (e.g., as symbols of bravery and masculinity, Kelly, 2018), has been reported to exceed cases of international trade in jaguar body parts, and to have reached levels that are most likely impacting jaguar populations (CITES, 2021).…”