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Andean Cat Alliance

About | Solutions | Donate | Stories

Working Together to Save Andean Cats

When you support Andean Cat Alliance (AGA), you help conservation efforts of the Andean cat and its habitat, through innovative strategies in research, conservation, community participation and support in the management of wild areas.
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AGA brings together four countries to save endangered Andean cats.

AGA is a multinational network that unites conservation professionals from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile and Peru and their conservation work to protect Andean cats and its habitat throughout its range.

The Andean cat is one of the rarest and least-known cats in the world.

It lives high in the Andes Mountains and Patagonian steppe, where food is scarce and weather conditions are extreme.

Find out more

Committed to coexistence with local communities.

AGA’s vision is the conservation and long-term protection of Andean cat populations and their habitat, in harmony with human communities.

Find out more

Species Impact

This small, sturdy cat is difficult to find—there have been only ten recorded sightings in 25 years—and even harder to study. It is considered the most threatened feline in the Americas and is counted among the five most endangered cats in the world.

Team Values

The Andean Cat Alliance (AGA) protects one of the rarest and most elusive cat species in the world, the Andean cat. There have only been ten sightings of Andean cats within the last 25 years, making efforts to study them quite challenging. With less than 1,400 adult cats remaining in the wild, AGA’s work across Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, and Peru is crucial to the survival of this species. AGA employs a multinational approach to address threats to the cat’s habitat, which, coupled with the involvement of local communities, provides the most impactful strategies to ensure this remarkable cat has a future in its home in the Andes Mountains.

The Andean cat is one of the rarest and least-known cats in the world.

It lives high in the Andes Mountains and Patagonian steppe, where food is scarce and weather conditions are extreme.

Find out more

Committed to coexistence with local communities.

AGA’s vision is the conservation and long-term protection of Andean cat populations and their habitat, in harmony with human communities.

Find out more

Species Impact

This small, sturdy cat is difficult to find—there have been only ten recorded sightings in 25 years—and even harder to study. It is considered the most threatened feline in the Americas and is counted among the five most endangered cats in the world.

Team Values

The Andean Cat Alliance (AGA) protects one of the rarest and most elusive cat species in the world, the Andean cat. There have only been ten sightings of Andean cats within the last 25 years, making efforts to study them quite challenging. With less than 1,400 adult cats remaining in the wild, AGA’s work across Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, and Peru is crucial to the survival of this species. AGA employs a multinational approach to address threats to the cat’s habitat, which, coupled with the involvement of local communities, provides the most impactful strategies to ensure this remarkable cat has a future in its home in the Andes Mountains.

Conservation Solutions

Icon Reducing Conflict
Icon Scientific Research
Icon Expanding Education
Icon Empowering Women
Icon Boosting Local Economies

Conflict Mitigation

AGA’s Conflict Mitigation Program aims to eliminate retaliatory hunting of Andean cats by reducing conflict between herders and carnivores, such as culpeo foxes and pumas, that prey on cattle. By providing livestock guard dogs, deterrent lights, and livestock corrals, AGA reduces these incidents and improves the community’s awareness about the relevance of the conservation of the Andean cat.

In the Field 24/7

AGA’s “In the Field 24/7” program uses non-invasive research methods, such as camera trapping and genetic sampling of scat and other evidence, to fill information gaps about the global distribution, behavior, and health of the elusive Andean cat. These methods create the equivalent of having researchers in the field 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, collecting information that allows AGA to develop adequate monitoring and conservation strategies.

Education Program

AGA’s education program increases the knowledge and raises awareness about the relevance of the Andean cat and its environment among local communities. The curriculum and activities are adaptable to different audiences, from elementary school students to technical staff of governmental agencies. This modular program allows AGA to be versatile when delivering the conservation message.

CATcrafts

AGA works with women artisans to identify traditional techniques and raw materials that can be sold globally in fair trade markets. This program empowers women and generates alternative income for their families, all while protecting and celebrating the cultural identity of those who live with the Andean cat.

CATcrafts

AGA’s CATcrafts Program aims to preserve the habitat of the Andean cat through the development of sustainable economic alternatives for local communities to reduce pressure on their natural resources. This solution has created an economic value for the Andean cat’s protection, its cultural significance, and transforms the artisans into ambassadors.

Icon Reducing Conflict

Conflict Mitigation

AGA’s Conflict Mitigation Program aims to eliminate retaliatory hunting of Andean cats by reducing conflict between herders and carnivores, such as culpeo foxes and pumas, that prey on cattle. By providing livestock guard dogs, deterrent lights, and livestock corrals, AGA reduces these incidents and improves the community’s awareness about the relevance of the conservation of the Andean cat.

Icon Scientific Research

In the Field 24/7

AGA’s “In the Field 24/7” program uses non-invasive research methods, such as camera trapping and genetic sampling of scat and other evidence, to fill information gaps about the global distribution, behavior, and health of the elusive Andean cat. These methods create the equivalent of having researchers in the field 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, collecting information that allows AGA to develop adequate monitoring and conservation strategies.

Icon Expanding Education

Education Program

AGA’s education program increases the knowledge and raises awareness about the relevance of the Andean cat and its environment among local communities. The curriculum and activities are adaptable to different audiences, from elementary school students to technical staff of governmental agencies. This modular program allows AGA to be versatile when delivering the conservation message.

Icon Empowering Women

CATcrafts

AGA works with women artisans to identify traditional techniques and raw materials that can be sold globally in fair trade markets. This program empowers women and generates alternative income for their families, all while protecting and celebrating the cultural identity of those who live with the Andean cat.

Icon Boosting Local Economies

CATcrafts

AGA’s CATcrafts Program aims to preserve the habitat of the Andean cat through the development of sustainable economic alternatives for local communities to reduce pressure on their natural resources. This solution has created an economic value for the Andean cat’s protection, its cultural significance, and transforms the artisans into ambassadors.

When you get involved, donate, or spread the word on social media, you are truly making a better world for Andean Cats and the communities that live near them. Here are a few ways you can help:

Connect with Andean Cat Alliance on social media to learn more about their work and be a voice for these elusive cats.

   

Visit AGA’s website and sign up for their newsletter to deepen your connection with conservation.

Visit Website

Donate to support AGA’s work protecting Andean Cats. Through our donation model, 100% of your donation goes to field with zero taken for overhead or administration.

Andean Cat Alliance (Rocio Palacios)
Most AGA staff members have never laid eyes on an Andean cat—it is so scarce and elusive that it is almost a ghost. The Andean cat represents all that is wild in the Andes, and by conserving it we are preserving one of earth's last wild places, the expansive high-altitude Andean mountain habitat.
Dr. Rocio Palacios

How do you protect a species you don't see?

Dr. Rocio Palacios of Andean Cat Alliance (AGA) tells TV network, HITN, how AGA is saving the rare and elusive "ghost of the Andes".

News & Stories

The Andean Cats Next Door

The Andean Cats Next Door

From his apartment window, Bernardo Segura can see the high slopes of the Andes Mountains just outside of Santiago, Chile.... Learn More
Advancing Conservation With a Single Photo

Advancing Conservation With a Single Photo

The wind howled and the sky was awash with orange and violet as Dr. Rocío Palacios, Executive Director of Andean... Learn More
The Secret to Finding Andean Cats

The Secret to Finding Andean Cats

The wind whipped through Cintia Tellaeche’s hair as she crouched to reach the camera trap fastened to a post. She... Learn More
An Andean Cat's Best Friend

An Andean Cat's Best Friend

Rodrigo Villalobos got the call early in the morning. In the cold summer night, Adrián Muñoz, a goat farmer living... Learn More
Meet 2019 WCN Scholar Juan Carlos Huaranca

Meet 2019 WCN Scholar Juan Carlos Huaranca

Juan Carlos Huaranca hears the clatter of rocks slipping beneath his hiking boots as he ascends the Bolivian Andes in... Learn More
What They Don't Teach You In Science Class

What They Don't Teach You In Science Class

When I studied environmental science at university, we learned about biodiversity, species competition, habitat degradation, population dynamics, invasive species, and... Learn More
Learning About a Cat You Don't See

Learning About a Cat You Don't See

The vizcacha, a small, beige rodent, watches Constanza and her team of conservationists from Andean Cat Alliance (AGA) warily from... Learn More
Celebrating Women in Conservation

Celebrating Women in Conservation

Women play an integral role in conservation, with countless pioneering female conservationists working globally to save endangered wildlife. Tomorrow, on... Learn More
Jacobo’s Road Home

Jacobo’s Road Home

In March of 2016, local residents from the town of Patacamaya, situated in the La Paz Department in Bolivia, found... Learn More
Going to India to Save the Andean Cat

Going to India to Save the Andean Cat

Nicolás Lagos spends much of his time in the rugged Andes Mountains of Chile, where he works with the Andean Cat... Learn More
Andean Cat Alliance's Four Legged Fieldworker

Andean Cat Alliance's Four Legged Fieldworker

Monty was a street puppy, rescued by a woman who had recently lost her dog. When she found him, Monty... Learn More
Finding the Andean Cat

Finding the Andean Cat

The Andean cat, which lives high in the rugged Andes Mountains, is one of the rarest cats in the world.... Learn More
Life in the Field for Andean Cat Alliance, Chile

Life in the Field for Andean Cat Alliance, Chile

Have you ever wondered what it’s like to be a conservationist out in the field? Wonder no more! WCN staff... Learn More
Using Art to Create Conservation Culture

Using Art to Create Conservation Culture

This is part of our ongoing series about technology and conservation. Our previous installments are here and here. Sometimes the... Learn More
Wildlife on Camera- Andean Cats

Wildlife on Camera- Andean Cats

In the Hall of the Mountain King- The elusive Andean cat lives high in the arid environment of the Andes Mountains... Learn More
Photography Credits: Andean Cat Alliance, Joshua Asel, Sebastian Kennerknecht, Juan Reppucci,  Cristian Sepulveda, Lilian Villalba
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