India identified as most important country for tiger conservation

September 15, 2010 04:00 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 09:42 pm IST - Washington

India has been identified as the most important country for tigers with 18 source sites dedicated solely to their conservation. File Photo: K. Murali Kumar

India has been identified as the most important country for tigers with 18 source sites dedicated solely to their conservation. File Photo: K. Murali Kumar

India has been identified as the most important country for tigers with 18 source sites dedicated solely to their conservation, according to a recent study.

In a worrying discovery, the Wildlife Conservation Society and other groups have found that most of the world’s last remaining tigers — long decimated by overhunting, logging, and wildlife trade — are now clustered in just six percent of their available habitat.

In their study, the researchers have identified 42 ‘source sites’ scattered across Asia that is now the last hope and greatest priority for the conservation and recovery of the world’s largest cat. The securing of the tiger’s remaining source sites is the most effective and efficient way of not only preventing extinction but seeding a recovery of the wild tiger, say the study’s authors.

The researchers also assert that effective conservation efforts focused on these sites are both possible and economically feasible but it requires an additional 35 million dollar a year for increased monitoring and enforcement to enable tiger numbers to double in these last strongholds.

According to the paper, fewer than 3,500 tigers remain in the wild, of which only about 1,000 are breeding females. Joe Walston, Director of the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Asia Program and lead author of the study, and his co-authors identified 42 tiger source sites, which were defined as sites that contain breeding populations of tigers and have the potential to seed the recovery of tigers across wider landscapes.

India was identified as the most important country for the species with 18 source sites. Sumatra contains eight source sites, and the Russian Far East contains six. The authors calculate the total required annual cost of effectively managing source sites to be 82 million dollars, which includes the cost of law enforcement, wildlife monitoring, community involvement, and other factors.

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