Swarts was born in Paris; her family moved to Connecticut when she was a toddler.[2]
She did her undergraduate studies at Pomona College.[2][3]
Her plan going into college was to work with animals; at Pomona, professors James J. McKenna and Rachel N. Levin showed her alternative tracks for this than zookeeping and veterinary science. She graduated in 1994,[3]
majoring in biological anthropology,[2] a self-designed plan of study combining the fields of her two mentors.[3]
After completing her doctorate, Swarts took a desk job with the Fish and Wildlife Service.[3]
She transferred to her current position at Laguna Atascosa in October 2013.[2]
Although ocelots can be found in 22 countries, their available habitat has been reduced by development.[3]
The south of Texas, where Swarts works, and the south of Arizona are the only parts of the United States where ocelots live and breed in the wild, both in parklands and on private property.[1]
However, as Swarts has documented, many have died from automobile collisions.
Swarts has worked with the Texas Department of Transportation in the establishment of underpasses beneath the roadways, so that ocelots and other wildlife can cross in safety.[1][4] Her work with the ocelots also involves tracking them with GPS collars, and trapping them to give them their collars.[3] In 2016, she was involved in the discovery of a den of ocelot kittens, the first such den to be found in the US in 20 years.[3][5][6]