Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Tigers fast dying out despite campaigns

This newborn Sumatran tiger cub is one of only 250 thought to be still alive in the wild.The world’s tiger population is declining fast despite efforts to save them, and new strategies are urgently needed to keep the species from dying out, international wildlife experts say.

‘‘We are assembled here to save tigers that are at the verge of extinction,’’ Nepal’s secretary of forest and soil conservation, Yuvaraj Bhusal, told a conference on Tuesday of tiger experts from 20 countries, including the 13 where wild tigers are still found.

An estimated 3500 to 4000 tigers now roam the world’s forests, down from the more than 100,000 estimated at the beginning of the 20th century. All the remaining tigers are in Asia.

Participants at the conference, including the World Bank, the World Wildlife Fund and other groups, plan to discuss strategies for tiger conservation, as well as challenges such as poaching, the trade of tiger parts and conflicts between tigers and local populations.

A Sumatran tiger died after being caught in a pig snare last week in Indonesia, the country’s news agency, Antara, reported on Monday. The report said the tiger died as it was being prepared for surgery on Monday. Only about 250 Sumatran tigers remain in the wild.

via Tigers fast dying out despite campaigns.

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