Continental tiger - World Wildlife Fund The continental tiger faces poaching and habitat loss across Asia See WWF’s efforts to protect and recover tiger populations
Thailand’s Wild Tiger Population Is Growing | World Wildlife Fund After years of concerted conservation efforts, Thailand’s wild tiger populations are increasing, with a new estimate of 179-223 tigers This news, released by the Royal Thai Government, comes after decades of poaching and forest loss that have threatened Thailand’s wild tiger population This increase marks a significant turn in the tide for tigers in Southeast Asia Most wild tiger
WWF Report: Tiger Numbers Rebound Since 2010 | World Wildlife Fund In celebration of the Lunar Year of the Tiger, WWF reflects on progress made since 2010 when the 13 tiger range countries set out to achieve an unprecedented goal: doubling the number of tigers in the wild WASHINGTON, DC -- As we enter the 2022 Year of the Tiger, World Wildlife Fund's (WWF) latest
How wild tigers are reclaiming areas of their historic range This Global Tiger Day, tigers—and the rest of us—have reasons to be hopeful While only inhabiting a fraction of the space they used to occupy (92% of their historic range is now lost), tigers are slowly returning to the areas they once roamed Together, governments, communities, and NGO’s like WWF, are helping tigers and, by doing so, supporting other wildlife and healthy ecosystems
India’s Tiger Survey Shows Promising Conservation Gains | World . . . India launched Project Tiger in 1973, setting an ambitious tiger conservation goal Fifty years later, in July 2023, India announced that its latest survey had recorded an estimated minimum of 3,682 tigers The 2022 survey, which scoured nearly 94 million acres and assessed thousands of camera trap images, found 619 more tigers than the last census in 2018 and more than double the tigers in