The Endangered Tiger
Tigers are native to much
of Asia, from some of the coldest regions to the steamy rainforests of the
Indonesian Islands. They are the top predator in every ecosystem they inhabit.
Until the 20th Century
there were nine tiger subspecies that probably numbered over 100,000 animals.
They included the giant 660-pound, or 300 kilo, Siberian (Pantera tigris
altaica) and Caspian (Pantera tigris virgata; now extinct) tigers as well as
the relatively small—and now also extinct—200-pound (90 kilo) Balinese tiger.
Depending on whether there are any remaining South China tigers—nobody has seen
one in years—there are either 5 or 6 tiger subspecies remaining in existence;
all are endangered. All tiger subspecies put together currently amount to
around 3,200 endangered tigers remaining in the wild.
See A Range Map Of All
The Endangered Tiger Species
See Our Latest Update On
The Endangered Tiger’s Status
The main reasons tigers
are endangered—in most cases cases, critically endangered—are illegal hunting
for their pelts, meat and body parts (used in folk medicines) as well as
habitat loss that results from logging and other forms of forest destruction.
Fewer than 500 endangered
Siberian, or Amur, tigers remain in the wild, all of of them in a small area of
coastal Far-Eastern Russia. Although the population has appeared stable until
recently, these tigers are threatened by poaching, habitat loss due to logging,
road-building and development, as well as by the problem of inbreeding that has
resulted from the fact that, before conservation measures were implemented in
the 1930′s, the entire population had collapsed to around 40 individuals. Read
more about endangered Siberian tigers.
The Bengal tiger (Pantera
tigris tigris) is the most numerous of the endangered tiger subspecies, with
probably fewer than 2,000 remaining at large in India, Nepal, Bangladesh and
Bhutan.
There are fewer than 500
each of the endangered Malayan tiger (Pantera tigris jacksoni), native to the
Malay Peninsula, and the endangered Sumatran tiger (Pantera tigris sumatrae)
which is found only on the Indonesian Island of Sumatra.
The Indochinese tiger
(Pantera tigris corbetti) of Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Myanmar
(Burma) probably numbers fewer than 500.
No critically endangered
South China tiger (Pantera tigris amoyensis) has been sighted for a number of
years, and the species may be extinct.
Along with the Balinese
tiger, formerly found on the Indonesian Island of Bali and known to be extinct
since the 1930′s, the Javan tiger (Pantera tigris sondaica), another Indonesia
Island species, was also hunted to extinction, with the last one spotted in
1979.
The Caspian tiger—a huge,
cold-climate species similar to the Siberian tiger, which once roamed the vast
mountains of western Asia—has been extinct since the 1950′s.
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