SaveTigersNow.org
Threatened with Extinction
- In the past 100 years wild tiger numbers have declined 97%. There may be as few as 3,200 wild tigers left in existence,
the lowest number ever recorded.
- Three tiger subspecies (Bali, Javan and Caspian) have already gone extinct and a fourth (the South China tiger) is on
its way.
Illegal poaching is the primary cause of the tiger's decline, driven by black market demand for tiger skins, bones and organs.
- The wild tiger once roamed throughout much of Asia. Today, this magnificent cat remains in just 7% of its original habitat.
- Shrinking tiger habitat is becoming increasingly fragmented due to logging and commercial plantations.
- If tigers and their habitats continue to decline at the current rate, a world without wild tigers could be a tragic reality
in just a few short decades.
Why Save Tigers Now
- This apex predator has a vital role in maintaining the natural balance of tigerlands that hold some of the richest biodiversity
in the world, from the mangroves of India to the edge of the Siberian Taiga down to the island of Sumatra.
- Tigers are an “umbrella species,” and protecting their habitat benefits hundreds, even thousands, of other
species in the process, including people.
- Stopping the poaching of tigers can help save other vulnerable species, strengthen local communities, improve law enforcement
and solidify regional cooperation.

How You Can Help
Spread the word! Tell your friends about the Save Tigers Now campaign.
Donate in support of WWF's tiger conservation efforts. Funds are urgently needed and will go directly to:
- strengthen grassroots projects to save tiger habitat across its range
- support antipoaching efforts on the ground
- build political will so that governments commit to bold, game-changing strategies that give wild tigers
a future
Together, we can preserve an icon of nature and save wild tigers for future generations.

New investigation finds suspect clearing operations of natural forest in Indonesia
The coalition Eyes on the Forest (EoF), based on the ground in Indonesia, has published a new Investigative Report on two Asia Pulp & Paper (APP)/Sinar
Mas Group (SMG) wood suppliers who conducted natural forest clearance in Kerumutan peat forest, Sumatra. These forests are
some of the last refuges for the endangered Sumatran elephant and the critically endangered Sumatran tiger. If forest clearing
isn't halted, both could become locally extinct in a few years' time. Forest loss is the single biggest threat to Sumatra’s
elephants. Most of Sumatra’s decline of local elephant herds, from 1400 to less than 200, happened where large areas
of forest were lost or severely fragmented.
View More Here

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