Greater Mekong Tiger Numbers Have Dropped More Than 70 Percent in 10 Years

Tiger numbers have fallen by more than 70 percent in slightly more than a decade in the Greater Mekong, with the region’s five countries containing only 350 tigers, according to a new World Wildlife Fund (WWF) report released today.
“Tigers on the Brink: Facing up to the Challenge in the Greater Mekong” comes as leaders from tiger range countries prepare to meet for the first Asian Ministerial Conference on Tiger Conservation in Hua Hin, Thailand. The conference is part of a year-long effort to save wild tigers during the Chinese Year of the Tiger, which begins February 14.
Read more
Tags: asian, extinction, greater mekong tiger, poaching, tigers, wildlife, world wildlife fund, wwf
Climate Change Threatens To Wipe Out One of Worlds Largest Tiger Populations This Century

One of the world’s largest tiger populations could disappear by the end of this century as rising sea levels caused by climate change destroy their habitat along the coast of Bangladesh in an area known as the Sundarbans, according to a new World Wildlife Fund-led study published in the journal Climatic Change.
Read more
Tags: climate change, estinction, exstinct, gas emissions, global warming, land, poaching, sea level rise, threat, tiger, tigers, unesco, wildlife, wwf





Get the latest Eco-buzz from Climate Crunch

