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Tiger | Species | WWF - World Wildlife Fund After a century of decline, tiger numbers are on the rise About 4,500 tigers remain in the wild, but much more work is needed to protect this species that’s still vulnerable to extinction
ENDANGERED TIGERS: NUMBERS, LOSS OF . . . - Facts and Details Tigers are being lost in Southeast Asia at a rate of about one a day and 10 annually Fewer than 300 tigers remain in the wild in Thailand In January 2010, AFP reported: “In Southeast Asia’s Greater Mekong region tiger numbers have plunged more than 70 percent in 12 years, the WWF The wild tiger population across Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam has dropped from an estimated
Exclusive Investigation Shows Tiger Farms Linked to . . . Fewer than 4,000 tigers remain in the wild, but more than 8,000 are held in captive facilities in Asia Investigations have shown that many of these facilities breed and slaughter tigers for the
The Last Stripes: Tiger Population Continues to Decline That number includes all subspecies—Bengal, Siberian, Sumatran, and Indochinese tigers, as well as the critically endangered South China tiger, which may already be extinct in the wild Bengal tigers, the largest population, number around 2,500 In stark contrast, fewer than 400 Sumatran tigers remain