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Introduction
• 5 subspecies of tigers existing today
– Amur or Siberian (Panthera tigris altaica)
– Bengal (Panthera tigris tigris)
– South China (Panthera tigris amoyensis)
– Sumatran (Panthera tigris sumatrae)
– Indochinese (Panthera tigris corbetti)
Extinct Tigers
• Javan (Panthera tigris sondaica)
• Bali (Panthera tigris balica)
• Caspian (Panthera tigris virgata)
Extinct Tigers-Javan
• Last seen in 1972
• Prime causes for extinction
– Poisons (poisoned boar)
– Encroachment of
plantations
• These coincided w/ a loss
of large ungulate prey base
• Currently no room for
tigers on Java
Extinct Tigers-Bali
• Believed to have gone
extinct in 1937
• The Dutch colonization in
1910 brought
– Plantations
– Hunters
• Similar losses of habitat
as the Javan
• Currently no room on
Bali for tigers
Extinct Tigers-Caspian
• Last one reportedly shot in 1959
• Preferred reed beds, but these were reclaimed as
ag land
• Probably also due to civil unrest
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Largest subspecies of
all tigers
• Males
– nearly 11 feet long
– weighing in around
660 pounds
• Females
– up to 8 1/2 feet long
– weighing about 200 to
370 pounds.
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Distinguished from the
other subspecies by
– Wider spaced brown
stripes
– Paler orange fur
– White belly fur
– Thicker, longer hair
with thick neck tuft
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Currently around 400
survive in the wild Russia,
China and possibly
N.Korea
• Numbers and range have
shrunk dramatically in the
past 100 years with a
recent increased declines
since the 1990’s
• Important that 400 may
not be the actual
“effective population”
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Causes of the population declines
– Poaching
– Habitat loss
• Habitat loss arrived in eastern Russia with the
railroads.
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Habitat requirements of the Siberian tiger
– Not really any for the tigers per se
– BUT, their food does have habitat requirements
– Red Deer (Cervus eluphus xanthropygus)
• Prefer forests with small openings
– Wild Boar (Sus scrofa)
• Prefer forests with mast producing trees
• Primarily Korean Pine (Pinus koraiensis)
• Probably also Mongolian Oak (Quercus mongolica)
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Habitat loss
– Widespread deforestation
– Large scale harvest of Korean Pine
• Primary effects of habitat loss
– Creation of a sink for dispersing tigers
– Loss of habitat for prey
• Why?
– Increased encounters with humans
– Increased depredations increased license hunting
– Gives false impression of population size due to more
visible tigers
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Why? contd.
– Large home ranges
• Female 200-400 km2
• Male 800-1000 km2
• Male home ranges
typically overlap 2
or 3 female home
ranges
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Habitat Protection
• Protect what is left
(save what you can
now, think about
improvements later)
– Primary concern areas
are those with with
pristine forest
remaining
– No permanent signs of
humans should exist
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Secondary areas of
emphasis should be
those forests that are
90% intact, but some
logging is taking place.
– Only selective logging
would be allowed
– This would leave only
small gaps
– Logging roads would be
closed when not in use
• Tertiary areas of
concern are those of
mixed land uses where
70% forest remains
– Mixed land uses would
persist
– Human operations
would be closed
whenever possible
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Most importantly
for all three areas of
protection concern
– Maintain a large
ungulate prey base
• Concentrate on
habitat for tiger prey
Amur (Siberian) Tiger
• Tiger corridors
– May provide cover to allow
tigers to disperse
– Could help prevent the “sink”
effect of open areas
– Would probably allow enough
dispersal for a reasonable
genetic flow between
fragmented populations
– Would increase the “effective”
population size
– Do not, however, provide
home range habitat (too
narrow)
Panthera tigris tigris
The Bengal Tiger
Distribution, Life History,
Population
• Distributions
-The Bengal tiger
occurs primarily
throughout India, with
smaller populations in
southern Nepal,
Bangladesh, Bhutan,
and western Myanmar
Population
• According to Peter Jacksons’ editorial in May of 1998 the
numbers of Bengal Tigers are as follows:
• Bangladesh-362 individuals
• Bhutan-91 adults
• China-35 individuals
• India-3,750 individuals
• Myanmar-231individuals
• Nepal-97 adults
Life History
• Size
•Male Bengal tigers
average 2.9 meters (9
1/2 feet) from head to
tail and weigh about
220 kilograms (480
pounds). Females are
smaller, measuring
about 2.5 meters (8
feet) in length and
weighing
approximately 140
kilograms (300
pounds).
White Tigers
• A popular attraction in
zoos, white tigers in the
wild were recorded in
India during the Mughal
Period from 1556 to
1605 AD
• At least 17 instances
were recorded in India
between 1907 and 1933
in Orissa, Bilaspur,
Sohagpur and Rewa
• But mostly found in zoos
today.
South China Tiger
• An estimated 20-30
individuals South
China tigers still exist
in the wild. Currently
47 South China tigers
live in 18 zoos, all in
China.The South
China tiger is the most
critically endangered
of all tiger subspecies.
South China Distribution
South China Tiger
• Chinese specialists believe
between 20 and 30 tigers
are still left in the wild.
The last time a wild tiger
was seen in the wild was
10 years ago. These facts
suggest that the South
China tiger is the rarest of
the five living tiger
subspecies, the most
threatened, and the closest
to extinction.
General Information
• The South China tiger is one
of the smallest tiger
subspecies
• Males are ~150 kilograms
(330 pounds)
• Females are ~110 kilograms
(240 pounds)
• Because there are so few
wild South China tigers, and
they have rarely been seen,
very little is know about
them at this point in time
• The tiger is a favorite subject
of Chinese artists, depicted
as fierce and powerful
Biology
• Age: The life span the South China and Bengal in the wild
is about 10 to 15 years. Tigers in zoos live to be around 16
and 20 years old.
• Fur: Tiger hair length varies geographically. In the
southern subspecies the hairs are short (approximately 7 to
20 mm on the back and 15 to 35 mm on the stomach).
• Claws: The forefeet have five toes and the hind feet have
four toes. All toes have claws. The claws are 3-4 inches.
• Teeth: Adult tigers have 30 large teeth. The length of the
canine teeth can be between 2.5 to 3 inches.
• Chromosomes: Chromosomes are arranged in pairs and
there are 19 pairs or 38 total.
Food
• Bengal and South China
tigers prey primarily on
wild deer and bovids.
Management Implications
• According to the study by James Smith et al.
Tigers must have the following in order to have a
viable population
• Very high ratio of good to excellent habitat
– When the “good” habitat in less that 50% breeding
tigers will not occur in the area. If it drops to less than
30% no tigers will be found
• Little or no metapopulations
• Stop poaching
• Stop or decrease habitat loss
• Increase prey number
– The prey numbers are down because of habitat loss
“Good Habitat”
• Tropical evergreen and
deciduous forests
• Coniferous, scrub oak, and
birch woodlands
• The mangrove swamps, and
dry thorn forests of
northwestern India, and the
tall grass jungles at the foot
of Himalayas
• The tiger's habitat
requirements can be
summarized as: some form
of dense vegetative cover,
sufficient large ungulate
prey and access to water.
Loss of Habitat
• Much of the forest and almost all of the grasslands have
gone as a growing human population converts them to land
for settlement and agriculture.
• In Nepal, between 1990 and 1995, 1.1 percent of the
country’s forest cover was lost each year.
• Habitat loss has resulted in fragmented tiger distributions
in Nepal. (ultimately decreasing the population)
• Many of these populations are currently too small to have
long term viability
Poaching
• Tiger parts are used in traditional Chinese medicine, in the form of
tiger bone wine and tiger plasters.
• Primary consumers of tiger products are Chinese communities
throughout the world.
• Drastic rise in tiger poaching was first noticed in 1990.
• If the present worldwide rate of poaching continues for three to six
more years, many tiger populations may be extinct
• They are protected by the Convention in International Trade in
Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora (CITES)
• Nepal has had serious problems at the national level with endangered
species trade control and CITES enforcement, serving as an important
conduit in the illegal trade of tiger parts.
Sumatran Tigers
» Panthera tigris sumatrae
Distribution
• Sumatran tigers are only
found on the island of
Sumatra
• About 400 to 500
Sumatran tigers live in the
wild, mostly in the island's
five national parks.
Another 235 Sumatran
tigers live in zoos around
the world
Life History
• What do Sumatran
Tigers look like?
– Sumatran tigers are the
smallest subspecies of
tiger. It has the darkest
coat of all tigers. Its
broad, black stripes are
closely spaced and
often doubled. Unlike
the Siberian tiger, it
has striped forelegs
Life History
• Weight
– Male Sumatran tigers weigh
about 264 pounds
– Female Sumatran tigers
weigh about 198 pounds
• Length
– Male Sumatran tigers
average 8 feet from head to
tail
– Female Sumatran tigers are
smaller, about 7 feet in
length.
Food
• The Sumatran tiger
eats wild pig, rusa
deer, muntjak or
barking deer which is
a smaller deer
Habitat
• The Sumatran tiger is
found in habitat that
ranges from lowland
forest to sub mountain
and mountain forest
with some peat-moss
forest
• Population density in
these areas are about
4-5 tigers per 100km²
Deforestation and Poaching
• Deforestation is
depriving tigers of
needed habitat leading
to subpopulations
• Poaching is
accelerating leading
from deforestation;
Tigers are easier to
find in these areas of
less habitat
Conservation
• Sumatran Tiger Project
– This is a long-term field study designed to develop a
cost-effective field census system for wild tigers using
ground-based census counts, remote camera census,
and radio-telemetry that can be modified and used as a
model for long-term population monitoring in Way
Kambas and other protected areas. Researchers will
establish a set of life history characteristics that will be
critical in developing effective interactive management
strategies for wild populations
Conservation
• Sumatran Tiger Project
cont.
– The project is also looking
to educate the people and
allocate forest resources in
tiger habitat
– This project has been
ongoing for multiple years
and is keeping track of the
number of tigers in each
area through several
methods of observation
Conservation
• Mark-recapture efforts
– This is a similar grid system
that is used in estimating the
tiger populations in Sumatra
– Study by Karanth and Nichols
(1998) in India estimated the
density for tiger populations (by
capture-recapture) and their
prey base (by line transects)
Location Tiger density Ungulate density Habitat type
Kanha 15.60 4.5 Tropical moist evergreen forest
Kaziranga 22.40 16.9 Alluvial grassland
Nagarahole 15.33 8.7 Tropical moist evergreen forest
Pench 9.9 11.0 Tropical moist evergreen forest
Tiger Mark-Recapture
Indochinese Tigers
» Panthera tigris corbetti
Distribution
• The majority of
Indochinese tigers are
centered in Thailand.
They are also found in
Myanmar, southern China,
Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam,
and peninsular Malaysia
• About 1,050-1,750 tigers
are left in the wild. About
60 live in zoos, mostly in
Asia, with a few in the
U.S.A.
Life History
• What do Indochinese
tigers look like?
– Look a lot like Bengal
tigers, but are a bit
smaller and darker,
with shorter, narrower
stripes
Life History
• Weight
– Male Indochinese tigers weigh about 400 pounds
– Female Indochinese tigers weigh about 250 pounds
• Length
– Male Indochinese tigers average 9 feet from head to tail
– Female Indochinese tigers are smaller, about 8 feet in
length
Food
• The Indochinese tiger
eats wild pig, wild
deer and wild cattle
Habitat
• Live in remote forests in
hilly to mountainous
terrain, much of which lies
along the borders between
countries
• Population densities in
these areas are similar to
the Sumatran tiger which
is 4 to 5 adult tigers/100
km2
Conservation
• Access to tiger habitat is often restricted,
and biologists have only recently been
granted limited permits for field surveys.
• As a result, relatively little is know about
the status of these tigers in the wild.
Conservation
• At this point, very little has been done in
Indochinese tiger management. Since the inability
to access tiger habitat, only talk has started in the
last years.
• There have been a couple of workshops held to
plan for conserving the tigers
– Masterplan workshop held at Khao Kheow Open Zoo,
Thailand, 17-20 July 1995
– Tiger GIS Workshop Royal Forest Department,
Bangkok, Thailand, 21-31 Jan. 1996
Conservation
• After the workshops the main concerns
right now are to maintain a healthy stock of
tigers in zoos, mostly in Thailand
• Deforestation, educating the people, and
controlling the poaching is the main
management implications so far
Protection in Vietnam
• Laws protecting tigers and tiger concerns
– Decree 39/CP, 1963 on regulation of hunting for wildlife. Tiger
was one of 4 limited hunting species.
– Regulation (1972) on forest protection.
– Decision 276/QD (1989) promulgating ban on hunting, trading
of tiger and 37 other species.
– Law for forest protection and development (1991).
– Decree 18/HDBT (1992) stipulates management and protection
of rare and precious species of flora and fauna. Tiger is one of
49 species and subspecies of complete ban on hunting and
using.
– Decree 14/CP stipulates system of penalties for violation on
forest protection.
– In 1994 Vietnam has joint to CITES for more effective control
of wildlife trade including tiger.
– March 1995, subregional tiger workshop held in Hanoi to
establish Action plan for tiger conservation in Vietnam, Laos,
Kampuchea
Status of Captive Tigers
• 20% of the entire tiger
population is
studbook-registered:
– 475 Siberian
– 235 Sumatran
– 300 Bengal
– 50 South China
– 35 Indochinese
• These do not include tigers in circuses, private facilities,
or non-participating zoos throughout the world.
•Do not contribute to breeding programs
Tigers in Zoos
Captive Management
• Species Survival Plans
(SSP)
– Objective: Preservation of
wildlife both as species
and as components of
ecosystems
– Cooperative management
programs for the AZA
(American Zoo and
Aquarium Association)
• Reinforce, not replace,
wild populations
Gene pools…
are becoming puddles
AZA Tiger SSP
• Manage 3 of the 5
remaining subspecies
– 102 member institutions
with 277 tigers:
• 154 Siberian; goal=175
• 54 Sumatran; goal=175
• 10 Indochinese; goal=75
• Bengal; goal=75
• 59 generic tigers
• Goal: 90% genetic
diversity for the next 100-
200 years
• Use breeding programs in
zoos to produce genetically
diverse individuals
SSP Masterplan
• Strength of the plan lies
within the biological
database for each animal
=Studbook
– Computerized database
containing genetic,
demographic and relevant
biological information about
zoo animals worldwide
– Avoid inbreeding
– Preserve genetic diversity
– International
Breeding Programs
• Artificial insemination
– Placing sperm into the
females vagina
– Not very successful (only
1 cub)
– Tiger ovulation is induced
by mating
• In vitro fertilization
– Eggs from female and
sperm from male
– Fertilized in lab
– Injected into female
– Has produced a litter of
3 cubs
More Breeding
• “Frozen zoos”
– Sperm and eggs
preserved in nitrogen
– Not yet successful, but
promising
• Reproductive research
– Monitor ovarian cycles
– Improve assisted
reproduction
technology
– Genetic resource bank
• Naturally
– The recommended
method
– SSP recommends when,
who will be moved to
zoos for breeding
The Ethics of Captive Animals
“Circus” tigers and “zoo” tigers have diverging interests
The Ethics of Captive Animals
• Dallas zoo: remodeled
– $4.5 million
– 1 acre of habitat which
resembles a rainforest
that has recently been
logged
– Now have enough
room to implement
captive breeding (SSP)
• Private Facilities
Poaching
• Trade in tiger bone
– Major factor that
threatens survival
– Used for thousands of
years in Asian medicine
for treatment of
rheumatism
• Some statistics from the
early 90’s
– South Korea imported
9000kg of bone over 24
years (1970-1994)
• About 750 skeletons
– Taiwan imported 12,000kg
over 10 years (1980-1990)
– China is a supplier,
processor and consumer
Tiger bone wine
“Killed for a Cure”
Judy A. Mills and Peter Jackson
• 1994 TRAFFIC report
– Documented the importance of the tiger trade
– Increased national and international awareness
• November 1994
– CITES passed a resolution to prohibit domestic trade of
tiger bone
– Also called for a ban on using tiger parts in traditional
medicine
•All subspecies, except Siberian, of tigers and their derivatives were
banned from international trade under CITES in 1975.
•Siberian in 1987
Progress in Tiger Trade
• Supply
– More seizures of goods
– Prices are lower
– Major supplying markets
disappeared
• Processing
– Manufacture has stopped
in many countries
– China now substitutes
sailong (mole rat)
– Medicines that are found
are old stock
• Demand
– Availability has
declined
– Consumers now support
wildlife conservation
• International Trade
– More countries join
CITES
Trade Continues
• Illegal supply market still operate (Cambodia, Indonesia, Vietnam)
• Processing markets label medicines incorrectly
• Domestic retail trade in Japan, China, Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia
• International trade through “an army of ants”= large number of
people smuggling small volumes of goods
What to do
• Improved enforcement
on trade bans,
especially international
• Increase penalties for
poaching
• Raise conservation
awareness
• More research to help
distinguish between
real and fake tiger parts
and products
• Adopt a tiger
– $2000
• Eviction of humans
from tiger habitat
• Conservation
Education
Decline Over Last 100 Years

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5 Subspecies of Endangered Tigers

  • 1.
  • 2. Introduction • 5 subspecies of tigers existing today – Amur or Siberian (Panthera tigris altaica) – Bengal (Panthera tigris tigris) – South China (Panthera tigris amoyensis) – Sumatran (Panthera tigris sumatrae) – Indochinese (Panthera tigris corbetti)
  • 3.
  • 4. Extinct Tigers • Javan (Panthera tigris sondaica) • Bali (Panthera tigris balica) • Caspian (Panthera tigris virgata)
  • 5. Extinct Tigers-Javan • Last seen in 1972 • Prime causes for extinction – Poisons (poisoned boar) – Encroachment of plantations • These coincided w/ a loss of large ungulate prey base • Currently no room for tigers on Java
  • 6. Extinct Tigers-Bali • Believed to have gone extinct in 1937 • The Dutch colonization in 1910 brought – Plantations – Hunters • Similar losses of habitat as the Javan • Currently no room on Bali for tigers
  • 7. Extinct Tigers-Caspian • Last one reportedly shot in 1959 • Preferred reed beds, but these were reclaimed as ag land • Probably also due to civil unrest
  • 8. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Largest subspecies of all tigers • Males – nearly 11 feet long – weighing in around 660 pounds • Females – up to 8 1/2 feet long – weighing about 200 to 370 pounds.
  • 11. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Distinguished from the other subspecies by – Wider spaced brown stripes – Paler orange fur – White belly fur – Thicker, longer hair with thick neck tuft
  • 12. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Currently around 400 survive in the wild Russia, China and possibly N.Korea • Numbers and range have shrunk dramatically in the past 100 years with a recent increased declines since the 1990’s • Important that 400 may not be the actual “effective population”
  • 13. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Causes of the population declines – Poaching – Habitat loss • Habitat loss arrived in eastern Russia with the railroads.
  • 14. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Habitat requirements of the Siberian tiger – Not really any for the tigers per se – BUT, their food does have habitat requirements – Red Deer (Cervus eluphus xanthropygus) • Prefer forests with small openings – Wild Boar (Sus scrofa) • Prefer forests with mast producing trees • Primarily Korean Pine (Pinus koraiensis) • Probably also Mongolian Oak (Quercus mongolica)
  • 15. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Habitat loss – Widespread deforestation – Large scale harvest of Korean Pine • Primary effects of habitat loss – Creation of a sink for dispersing tigers – Loss of habitat for prey • Why? – Increased encounters with humans – Increased depredations increased license hunting – Gives false impression of population size due to more visible tigers
  • 16. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Why? contd. – Large home ranges • Female 200-400 km2 • Male 800-1000 km2 • Male home ranges typically overlap 2 or 3 female home ranges
  • 17. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Habitat Protection • Protect what is left (save what you can now, think about improvements later) – Primary concern areas are those with with pristine forest remaining – No permanent signs of humans should exist
  • 18. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Secondary areas of emphasis should be those forests that are 90% intact, but some logging is taking place. – Only selective logging would be allowed – This would leave only small gaps – Logging roads would be closed when not in use • Tertiary areas of concern are those of mixed land uses where 70% forest remains – Mixed land uses would persist – Human operations would be closed whenever possible
  • 19. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Most importantly for all three areas of protection concern – Maintain a large ungulate prey base • Concentrate on habitat for tiger prey
  • 20. Amur (Siberian) Tiger • Tiger corridors – May provide cover to allow tigers to disperse – Could help prevent the “sink” effect of open areas – Would probably allow enough dispersal for a reasonable genetic flow between fragmented populations – Would increase the “effective” population size – Do not, however, provide home range habitat (too narrow)
  • 22. Distribution, Life History, Population • Distributions -The Bengal tiger occurs primarily throughout India, with smaller populations in southern Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, and western Myanmar
  • 23. Population • According to Peter Jacksons’ editorial in May of 1998 the numbers of Bengal Tigers are as follows: • Bangladesh-362 individuals • Bhutan-91 adults • China-35 individuals • India-3,750 individuals • Myanmar-231individuals • Nepal-97 adults
  • 24. Life History • Size •Male Bengal tigers average 2.9 meters (9 1/2 feet) from head to tail and weigh about 220 kilograms (480 pounds). Females are smaller, measuring about 2.5 meters (8 feet) in length and weighing approximately 140 kilograms (300 pounds).
  • 25. White Tigers • A popular attraction in zoos, white tigers in the wild were recorded in India during the Mughal Period from 1556 to 1605 AD • At least 17 instances were recorded in India between 1907 and 1933 in Orissa, Bilaspur, Sohagpur and Rewa • But mostly found in zoos today.
  • 26. South China Tiger • An estimated 20-30 individuals South China tigers still exist in the wild. Currently 47 South China tigers live in 18 zoos, all in China.The South China tiger is the most critically endangered of all tiger subspecies.
  • 28. South China Tiger • Chinese specialists believe between 20 and 30 tigers are still left in the wild. The last time a wild tiger was seen in the wild was 10 years ago. These facts suggest that the South China tiger is the rarest of the five living tiger subspecies, the most threatened, and the closest to extinction.
  • 29. General Information • The South China tiger is one of the smallest tiger subspecies • Males are ~150 kilograms (330 pounds) • Females are ~110 kilograms (240 pounds) • Because there are so few wild South China tigers, and they have rarely been seen, very little is know about them at this point in time • The tiger is a favorite subject of Chinese artists, depicted as fierce and powerful
  • 30. Biology • Age: The life span the South China and Bengal in the wild is about 10 to 15 years. Tigers in zoos live to be around 16 and 20 years old. • Fur: Tiger hair length varies geographically. In the southern subspecies the hairs are short (approximately 7 to 20 mm on the back and 15 to 35 mm on the stomach). • Claws: The forefeet have five toes and the hind feet have four toes. All toes have claws. The claws are 3-4 inches. • Teeth: Adult tigers have 30 large teeth. The length of the canine teeth can be between 2.5 to 3 inches. • Chromosomes: Chromosomes are arranged in pairs and there are 19 pairs or 38 total.
  • 31. Food • Bengal and South China tigers prey primarily on wild deer and bovids.
  • 32. Management Implications • According to the study by James Smith et al. Tigers must have the following in order to have a viable population • Very high ratio of good to excellent habitat – When the “good” habitat in less that 50% breeding tigers will not occur in the area. If it drops to less than 30% no tigers will be found • Little or no metapopulations • Stop poaching • Stop or decrease habitat loss • Increase prey number – The prey numbers are down because of habitat loss
  • 33. “Good Habitat” • Tropical evergreen and deciduous forests • Coniferous, scrub oak, and birch woodlands • The mangrove swamps, and dry thorn forests of northwestern India, and the tall grass jungles at the foot of Himalayas • The tiger's habitat requirements can be summarized as: some form of dense vegetative cover, sufficient large ungulate prey and access to water.
  • 34. Loss of Habitat • Much of the forest and almost all of the grasslands have gone as a growing human population converts them to land for settlement and agriculture. • In Nepal, between 1990 and 1995, 1.1 percent of the country’s forest cover was lost each year. • Habitat loss has resulted in fragmented tiger distributions in Nepal. (ultimately decreasing the population) • Many of these populations are currently too small to have long term viability
  • 35. Poaching • Tiger parts are used in traditional Chinese medicine, in the form of tiger bone wine and tiger plasters. • Primary consumers of tiger products are Chinese communities throughout the world. • Drastic rise in tiger poaching was first noticed in 1990. • If the present worldwide rate of poaching continues for three to six more years, many tiger populations may be extinct • They are protected by the Convention in International Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora (CITES) • Nepal has had serious problems at the national level with endangered species trade control and CITES enforcement, serving as an important conduit in the illegal trade of tiger parts.
  • 36. Sumatran Tigers » Panthera tigris sumatrae
  • 37. Distribution • Sumatran tigers are only found on the island of Sumatra • About 400 to 500 Sumatran tigers live in the wild, mostly in the island's five national parks. Another 235 Sumatran tigers live in zoos around the world
  • 38. Life History • What do Sumatran Tigers look like? – Sumatran tigers are the smallest subspecies of tiger. It has the darkest coat of all tigers. Its broad, black stripes are closely spaced and often doubled. Unlike the Siberian tiger, it has striped forelegs
  • 39. Life History • Weight – Male Sumatran tigers weigh about 264 pounds – Female Sumatran tigers weigh about 198 pounds • Length – Male Sumatran tigers average 8 feet from head to tail – Female Sumatran tigers are smaller, about 7 feet in length.
  • 40. Food • The Sumatran tiger eats wild pig, rusa deer, muntjak or barking deer which is a smaller deer
  • 41. Habitat • The Sumatran tiger is found in habitat that ranges from lowland forest to sub mountain and mountain forest with some peat-moss forest • Population density in these areas are about 4-5 tigers per 100km²
  • 42. Deforestation and Poaching • Deforestation is depriving tigers of needed habitat leading to subpopulations • Poaching is accelerating leading from deforestation; Tigers are easier to find in these areas of less habitat
  • 43. Conservation • Sumatran Tiger Project – This is a long-term field study designed to develop a cost-effective field census system for wild tigers using ground-based census counts, remote camera census, and radio-telemetry that can be modified and used as a model for long-term population monitoring in Way Kambas and other protected areas. Researchers will establish a set of life history characteristics that will be critical in developing effective interactive management strategies for wild populations
  • 44. Conservation • Sumatran Tiger Project cont. – The project is also looking to educate the people and allocate forest resources in tiger habitat – This project has been ongoing for multiple years and is keeping track of the number of tigers in each area through several methods of observation
  • 45. Conservation • Mark-recapture efforts – This is a similar grid system that is used in estimating the tiger populations in Sumatra – Study by Karanth and Nichols (1998) in India estimated the density for tiger populations (by capture-recapture) and their prey base (by line transects) Location Tiger density Ungulate density Habitat type Kanha 15.60 4.5 Tropical moist evergreen forest Kaziranga 22.40 16.9 Alluvial grassland Nagarahole 15.33 8.7 Tropical moist evergreen forest Pench 9.9 11.0 Tropical moist evergreen forest
  • 48. Distribution • The majority of Indochinese tigers are centered in Thailand. They are also found in Myanmar, southern China, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, and peninsular Malaysia • About 1,050-1,750 tigers are left in the wild. About 60 live in zoos, mostly in Asia, with a few in the U.S.A.
  • 49. Life History • What do Indochinese tigers look like? – Look a lot like Bengal tigers, but are a bit smaller and darker, with shorter, narrower stripes
  • 50. Life History • Weight – Male Indochinese tigers weigh about 400 pounds – Female Indochinese tigers weigh about 250 pounds • Length – Male Indochinese tigers average 9 feet from head to tail – Female Indochinese tigers are smaller, about 8 feet in length
  • 51. Food • The Indochinese tiger eats wild pig, wild deer and wild cattle
  • 52. Habitat • Live in remote forests in hilly to mountainous terrain, much of which lies along the borders between countries • Population densities in these areas are similar to the Sumatran tiger which is 4 to 5 adult tigers/100 km2
  • 53. Conservation • Access to tiger habitat is often restricted, and biologists have only recently been granted limited permits for field surveys. • As a result, relatively little is know about the status of these tigers in the wild.
  • 54. Conservation • At this point, very little has been done in Indochinese tiger management. Since the inability to access tiger habitat, only talk has started in the last years. • There have been a couple of workshops held to plan for conserving the tigers – Masterplan workshop held at Khao Kheow Open Zoo, Thailand, 17-20 July 1995 – Tiger GIS Workshop Royal Forest Department, Bangkok, Thailand, 21-31 Jan. 1996
  • 55. Conservation • After the workshops the main concerns right now are to maintain a healthy stock of tigers in zoos, mostly in Thailand • Deforestation, educating the people, and controlling the poaching is the main management implications so far
  • 56. Protection in Vietnam • Laws protecting tigers and tiger concerns – Decree 39/CP, 1963 on regulation of hunting for wildlife. Tiger was one of 4 limited hunting species. – Regulation (1972) on forest protection. – Decision 276/QD (1989) promulgating ban on hunting, trading of tiger and 37 other species. – Law for forest protection and development (1991). – Decree 18/HDBT (1992) stipulates management and protection of rare and precious species of flora and fauna. Tiger is one of 49 species and subspecies of complete ban on hunting and using. – Decree 14/CP stipulates system of penalties for violation on forest protection. – In 1994 Vietnam has joint to CITES for more effective control of wildlife trade including tiger. – March 1995, subregional tiger workshop held in Hanoi to establish Action plan for tiger conservation in Vietnam, Laos, Kampuchea
  • 57. Status of Captive Tigers • 20% of the entire tiger population is studbook-registered: – 475 Siberian – 235 Sumatran – 300 Bengal – 50 South China – 35 Indochinese • These do not include tigers in circuses, private facilities, or non-participating zoos throughout the world. •Do not contribute to breeding programs
  • 59. Captive Management • Species Survival Plans (SSP) – Objective: Preservation of wildlife both as species and as components of ecosystems – Cooperative management programs for the AZA (American Zoo and Aquarium Association) • Reinforce, not replace, wild populations Gene pools… are becoming puddles
  • 60. AZA Tiger SSP • Manage 3 of the 5 remaining subspecies – 102 member institutions with 277 tigers: • 154 Siberian; goal=175 • 54 Sumatran; goal=175 • 10 Indochinese; goal=75 • Bengal; goal=75 • 59 generic tigers • Goal: 90% genetic diversity for the next 100- 200 years • Use breeding programs in zoos to produce genetically diverse individuals
  • 61. SSP Masterplan • Strength of the plan lies within the biological database for each animal =Studbook – Computerized database containing genetic, demographic and relevant biological information about zoo animals worldwide – Avoid inbreeding – Preserve genetic diversity – International
  • 62. Breeding Programs • Artificial insemination – Placing sperm into the females vagina – Not very successful (only 1 cub) – Tiger ovulation is induced by mating • In vitro fertilization – Eggs from female and sperm from male – Fertilized in lab – Injected into female – Has produced a litter of 3 cubs
  • 63. More Breeding • “Frozen zoos” – Sperm and eggs preserved in nitrogen – Not yet successful, but promising • Reproductive research – Monitor ovarian cycles – Improve assisted reproduction technology – Genetic resource bank • Naturally – The recommended method – SSP recommends when, who will be moved to zoos for breeding
  • 64. The Ethics of Captive Animals “Circus” tigers and “zoo” tigers have diverging interests
  • 65. The Ethics of Captive Animals • Dallas zoo: remodeled – $4.5 million – 1 acre of habitat which resembles a rainforest that has recently been logged – Now have enough room to implement captive breeding (SSP) • Private Facilities
  • 66. Poaching • Trade in tiger bone – Major factor that threatens survival – Used for thousands of years in Asian medicine for treatment of rheumatism • Some statistics from the early 90’s – South Korea imported 9000kg of bone over 24 years (1970-1994) • About 750 skeletons – Taiwan imported 12,000kg over 10 years (1980-1990) – China is a supplier, processor and consumer Tiger bone wine
  • 67. “Killed for a Cure” Judy A. Mills and Peter Jackson • 1994 TRAFFIC report – Documented the importance of the tiger trade – Increased national and international awareness • November 1994 – CITES passed a resolution to prohibit domestic trade of tiger bone – Also called for a ban on using tiger parts in traditional medicine •All subspecies, except Siberian, of tigers and their derivatives were banned from international trade under CITES in 1975. •Siberian in 1987
  • 68. Progress in Tiger Trade • Supply – More seizures of goods – Prices are lower – Major supplying markets disappeared • Processing – Manufacture has stopped in many countries – China now substitutes sailong (mole rat) – Medicines that are found are old stock • Demand – Availability has declined – Consumers now support wildlife conservation • International Trade – More countries join CITES
  • 69. Trade Continues • Illegal supply market still operate (Cambodia, Indonesia, Vietnam) • Processing markets label medicines incorrectly • Domestic retail trade in Japan, China, Vietnam, Thailand, Indonesia • International trade through “an army of ants”= large number of people smuggling small volumes of goods
  • 70. What to do • Improved enforcement on trade bans, especially international • Increase penalties for poaching • Raise conservation awareness • More research to help distinguish between real and fake tiger parts and products • Adopt a tiger – $2000 • Eviction of humans from tiger habitat • Conservation Education
  • 71. Decline Over Last 100 Years