Number Of Wild Tigers Increases For First Time In 100 Years

 
Related

12 foods that help your liver detox your body

About everything
260 points

5 key reasons why parenting is in crisis right now

About everything
572 points



Most recent

2023, un año de florecimiento y consolidación para Confiar

Prensa
8 points

La Magia del Color': una ventana a la vida rural del Caribe colombiano

Comunicaciones
8 points

Usos de Home Assistant que te facilitarán tu vida

MaríaGeek
14 points

Pure Storage nombra a Joao Silva como vicepresidente para Europa, Medio Oriente, África y América La

Patricia Amaya Comunicaciones
14 points

Homenaje a la mujer: Vívolo Café celebra un año de pasión por el café con entrada libre

Comunicaciones
12 points

Principales trámites de una herencia que debes conocer

MaríaGeek
8 points

En agosto nos vemos.

Pablo Emilio Obando Acosta
18 points

Tecnologías destacadas de los cruceros Costa Smeralda

MaríaGeek
12 points

Nexsys amplía su oferta con Kingston FURY, la nueva joya de la memoria RAM para gamers

Prensa
12 points

SICÓPATAS MAYORES

Octavio Cruz Gonzalez
12 points
SHARE
TWEET
The number of tigers in the wild has risen from an estimated 3,200 in 2010 to about 3,890 in 2016 — a gain of more than 20 percent after a century of decline, according to the World Wildlife Fund. The group says the tiger populations have grown in at least four countries: India, Russia, Nepal and Bhutan.

Number Of Wild Tigers Increases For First Time In 100 Years

Early in the 20th century, the world had more than 100,000 tigers in it, as the author Caroline Fraser wrote in a report for Yale University back in 2010.

The population increase "is a pivotal step in the recovery of one of the world's most endangered and iconic species," said Ginette Hemley, senior vice president of wildlife conservation at WWF.

The findings are being praised as a key step toward a lofty goal that was set in 2010: to double the number of wild tiger populations worldwide by 2022. The survey gives a progress report at that initiative's halfway mark.

The WWF cites factors such as better survey processes and enhanced protections in explaining the gains. But it adds that the world's tigers remain threatened by shrinking habitats in Asia and that they are also a prime target for poachers.

"Every part of the tiger — from whisker to tail — is traded in illegal wildlife markets, feeding a multi-billion dollar criminal network," the organization says.

Fuente: www.npr.org
SHARE
TWEET
To comment you must log in with your account or sign up!
Featured content