In response to today’s
announcement by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) that it will improve the
regulation and monitoring of the U.S.'s large captive tiger population, World
Wildlife Fund (WWF) issued the following statement from Leigh Henry, senior
policy advisor for wildlife conservation and co-author of the first study to
look at the connection between these cats and illegal trade:
"The U.S. just threw a
lifeline to tiger populations fighting to make a comeback in the wild. By
tightening regulations around captive tigers, the U.S. is making it harder for
captive-bred tigers to filter into and stimulate the black market that
threatens wild tigers in Asia.
"More tigers exist in
captivity in the U.S. than remain in the wild globally. Astonishingly, there is
no system in the U.S. to monitor how many captive tigers there are, who owns
them, when they’re sold or traded, and what happens to their parts when they
die.
"The new regulations by
USFWS are a critical first step toward ensuring that tigers bred in the U.S.
aren’t helping fuel the illegal trade that drives poaching of wild tigers
overseas. It's also another sign that the Obama administration takes wildlife
crime seriously.
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