Leo-17
Last spring, a camera trap caught a young male Jeong didn't have in his records. Shoulder and left flank rosettes with a pattern that matched none of the previous ones. A disperser: a juvenile leopard establishing its own territory for the first time. Jeong drew it that same night, by the light of the wood stove, comparing the pattern against the thirty-odd ones he already had filed away in his notebook. He named it Leo-17. The names are private, his own, and he doesn't share them with the team. But when a new researcher mixes up one individual with another, the disappointment shows.
Recognizing an animal individually changes the way you work. It stops being a census figure and becomes someone with a route, with habits, with a slope where it sleeps at dusk and a stream where it drinks at dawn. Researchers with PhDs use pattern-recognition software for this. Jeong uses pencil, paper, and three years of looking very slowly. The method is slower, but what passes through your fingers stays in a way a screen can't replicate. Abstract conservation — saving a species, protecting an ecosystem — becomes concrete responsibility when you know who you're tracking.







