The first time I met Abbie Martin, it wasn’t in the tropical wetlands of the Brazilian Pantanal, but in a pottery class in Coral Bay. We were a motley crew of aspiring ceramic artists, struggling to make forms out of our stubborn clay.
By the third class, my ceramic aspirations had faded, so I focused on getting to know my classmates instead. I knew Abbie was a skilled boat captain, but it wasn’t until later that I learned the full scope of her work: she founded the Jaguar ID Project and created the largest jaguar demographic database in the world, identifying a staggering 389 jaguars in central South America.

Abbie is the catalyst for wild jaguar conservation in the Pantanal, the world’s largest tropical wetland in central South America. Abbie Martin’s work, alongside her team of biologists, is the focus of a new documentary, premiering at the St. John School of the Arts on April 19th at 6:30 pm.
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