Latest News:  

English>>China Society

Nations unite to help tigers (2)

By Yang Yao (China Daily)

08:30, July 30, 2013

A visitor at Weifang Jinbaole Park plays with three baby tigers in Weifang, Shandong province, on Monday. [Zhang Chi / for China Daily]

The Kunming conference was called the International Workshop for Transboundary Conservation of Tigers and Other Endangered Species, and the Strategy for Combating Illegal Trade in Wildlife. It was organized by the State Forestry Administration to observe Global Tiger Day on July 29.

Yin Hong, deputy director of the State Forestry Administration, said on Monday that endangered animals can be saved if nations work together.

"The conservation of tigers and combating illegal trade in wildlife require the concerted effort of all the nations where they live," she said.

There are 13 tiger range countries, and they differ in their abilities in funding, law enforcement, supervision and scientific know-how.

Yin said more help should be made available to countries with weaker financial capabilities, law enforcement and scientific development.

The 13 countries created Global Tiger Day at the Tiger Summit in November 2010 in St Petersburg, Russia. The day is celebrated annually on July 29 to raise awareness of support for the conservation of wild tigers.

There are 3,200 to 3,500 wild tigers in the world, and the 13 nations have agreed to increase their number to 6,000 by 2022.

"We have set an ambitious goal," said Mike Baltzer, head of the WWF Tigers Alive Initiative. "To know global tiger population numbers will be to know where we are and will help understand what else we need to do together to put tigers in a safe place by 2022."

He said that determining the exact number of tigers in the wild is difficult because they are notoriously elusive and inhabit often remote and rugged terrain. Jiang Guangshun, of the China State Forestry Administration's Feline Research Center, said international cooperation is needed to count the tiger population.

For many countries, finding the number of tigers has been prohibitively expensive and time-consuming because many lack the techniques and equipment to survey tigers, particularly cheaper and more durable camera traps.

Jiang said China built a tiger/leopard monitoring platform in 2011 to collect information on the big cats' ranges and DNA as well as footprint images to create a database.

【1】 【2】



We Recommend:

San Francisco crash survivors come back home

China’s weekly story (2013.7.5-7.12)

A glimpse of residents' daily life in Sansha

Photos:The world's oldest woman

Students' survival challenge in a strange city

Fuzhou tops the list of hottest cities in China

Sea foods, a luxury bite in summer

College student car models show youthful vigor

Nightlife at Foxconn Zhengzhou park

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:HuangJin、Chen Lidan)

Related Reading

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. APF officers and men in actual-combat drill

  2. Soldiers leave for "Peace Mission 2013" drills

  3. DPRK marks 60th anniv. of armistice

  4. 37th anniversary of Tangshan earthquake

  5. Heat waves scorch many parts of China

  6. The hard life of a single father

  7. China beats Australia 4-3 in East Asian Cup

  8. Celebrity breakups

  9. Alibaba, e-concierge, soon at your service

  10. Cheap drug expected after GSK case

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. China's economy will continue to prosper
  2. Western countries face dilemma on Syrian conflict
  3. Reform, not incentives, to drive expansion
  4. Lenovo reigns as king of the hill
  5. Small exporters need more help to pass tough times
  6. Debate on internationalizing education
  7. Bo Xilai indicted for corruption
  8. China rules out provisional economic stimulus plan
  9. Removal of deposit rate ceiling not imminent
  10. Feeble Japanese-Philippine 'axis' doomed

What’s happening in China

Singer in spotlight after blog post

  1. Bee reserve stings planned tiger reserve
  2. China seizes 22,320 fake guns bound for Africa
  3. 3 killed, 5 injured in S China knife attack
  4. Marriage with expats in sickness and in stealth
  5. Onetime heaviest woman loses 55 kg in 80 days