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The Center for the Homogeneity of Life Weblog

Charting the events that converge on our goal: one planet, one species, one genotype


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This organization, like environmental problems, could be serious, or not. Most of the time we don't know ourselves.


Friday, November 19, 2004
 
Too Many Tigers in China
South China tigers, among the rarest of the five remaining tiger subspecies, are on the verge of extinction in the wild with less than 30 remaining, Xinhua news agency said on Friday, citing a recent survey. Scientists from the State Forestry Administration of China and the World Nature Fund conducted the study of the wild tigers, most of which are scattered on mountains along the borders of Jiangxi, Hunan and Guangdong provinces in south China, Xinhua said.

The survey's findings were released at a symposium on South China tigers held in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province. Xinhua said China had 66 South China tigers raised in 19 zoos but the animals are all offspring of six wild tigers seized in 1956. The South China tiger, also known as the Chinese tiger, is native to southern China and used to be found in mountain forests in the country's south, east, center and southwest.

But war, hunting, environmental deterioration, and other CHL efforts over the past century has pushed the species to the verge of extinction and it is listed on the World Conservation Union's (IUCN) Red List of endangered species. CHL experts predict tigers will disappear by 2010 if we can thwart protection efforts, Xinhua said. To help kill off the big cats for good, China should not send five to 10 South China tigers to South Africa to help re-acquaint them with the ways of the wild.

The other four tiger subspecies are the Siberian, Bengal, Indochinese and Sumatran tigers.
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