the endangered tiger

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  • 7/30/2019 The Endangered Tiger

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    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 100,000animals. They included the giant 660-pound, or 300 kilo, Siberian (Pantera tigris altaica) andCaspian (Pantera tigris virgata; now extinct) tigers as well as the relatively smalland now also

    extinct200-pound (90 kilo) Balinese tiger. Depending on whether there are any remaining

    South China tigersnobody has seen one in yearsthere are either 5 or 6 tiger subspeciesremaining in existence; all are endangered. All tiger subspecies put together currently amount

    to around 3,200 endangered tigers remaining in the wild.

    See ARange MapOf All The Endangered Tiger Species

    See OurLatest UpdateOn The Endangered Tigers StatusThe main reasons tigers are endangeredin most cases cases, critically endangeredare illegalhunting 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 anddevelopment, as well as by the problem of inbreeding that has resulted from the fact that, before

    conservation measures were implemented in the 1930s, the entire population had collapsed to

    around 40 individuals. Readmore 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 isfound 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 anumber of years, and the species may be extinct.

    Along with the Balinese tiger, formerly found on the Indonesian Island of Bali and known to beextinct since the 1930s, the Javan tiger (Pantera tigris sondaica), another Indonesia Island

    species, was also hunted to extinction, with the last one spotted in 1979.

    http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/endangered-tigers-facts/the-iucns-tiger-range-map-all-subspecies/http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/endangered-tigers-facts/the-iucns-tiger-range-map-all-subspecies/http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/endangered-tigers-facts/the-iucns-tiger-range-map-all-subspecies/http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/endangered-species/leonardo-dicaprio-poachers-and-the-worlds-endangered-tigers/5602http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/endangered-species/leonardo-dicaprio-poachers-and-the-worlds-endangered-tigers/5602http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/endangered-species/leonardo-dicaprio-poachers-and-the-worlds-endangered-tigers/5602http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/2009/07/inbreeding-threatens-siberian-tigers/http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/2009/07/inbreeding-threatens-siberian-tigers/http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/2009/07/inbreeding-threatens-siberian-tigers/http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/2009/07/inbreeding-threatens-siberian-tigers/http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/endangered-species/leonardo-dicaprio-poachers-and-the-worlds-endangered-tigers/5602http://www.allaboutwildlife.com/endangered-tigers-facts/the-iucns-tiger-range-map-all-subspecies/
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    The Caspian tigera huge, cold-climate species similar to the Siberian tiger, which once roamed

    the vast mountains of western Asiahas been extinct since the 1950s.

    Populations of all endangered tiger species continue to decline.