As fires continue to ravage the Pantanal, the world's largest tropical wetland, a rescue center in Brazil treats jaguars injured in the blaze. The wildfires have been aggravated by the country's worst drought in seven decades, which experts attribute to climate change.
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00:00It's a surprise.
00:01Are you sure?
00:06It's just a surprise.
00:09I'm so excited.
00:10Me too.
00:30The case of Manassi is sad because she could not return to the Pantanal.
00:36This was because she burned her legs so badly that she lost the tendons that move the claws.
01:01This is a big problem, because this animal is safe until today,
01:07but it will return to a region that still has fire.
01:11But nowadays we see the top of the chain animal, in this case the jaguars,
01:17that are suffering from these burns, which is not something that used to happen frequently in the past.
01:30The jaguars are not afraid of humans.
01:35They are afraid of humans, because they are afraid of humans.
01:40They are afraid of humans, because they are afraid of humans.
01:45They are afraid of humans, because they are afraid of humans.
01:50They are afraid of humans, because they are afraid of humans.
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