APRIL 3, 2016
by Susanna Pilny
In perhaps what might be considered
cautiously optimistic news, forests in critical parts of the world haven’t been
destroyed as much as anticipated, meaning enough of them remain to achieve an
international goal of doubling world tiger populations.
Fewer than 3,500 tigers are left in the
wild, making them the most endangered big cat of all. Much of this is
because only 7 percent of the tiger's territory remains in Asia .
In the last century alone, wild tiger numbers have plunged by 95 percent.
What's killing the tigers?
The big problems are the usual culprits:
habitat destruction (from logging, development, and agriculture) and poaching
(partially because certain tiger body parts are used in traditional Asian
medicine).
By 2010, the crisis had grown to the
point that government officials from the 13 Asian countries where tigers still
roam, including four heads of state, convened a meeting in St. Petersburg , Russia .
There, they agreed on a global recovery goal: By 2022, the wild tiger
population would be double what it was at the time—a motion known as the Tx2
goal.
And so far, there have been some exciting
successes towards achieving it. Nepal
reports its tiger population has increased by 61 percent, while India reports a
31 percent growth. At the same time, though, habitat loss has only continued to
eat away at the remaining areas where tigers can live. This caused some to
become concerned that the Tx2 goal would be impossible to achieve—because too
little habitat would be left to support a wild tiger population of that size.
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