At the National
Tigers for Tigers Coalition office, we dream of forests, swamps and tundra
where wild tigers are free to roam without fear of falling victim to the
violent greed of poachers. We dream of a world as it once was, where less than
a century ago, more than 100,000 wild tigers prowled across Asia.
Unfortunately, so long as tiger parts remain profitable on the black market,
this is a dream that will never again be realized.
Today, less than 3,200 tigers are estimated to remain in the
wild. It’s a number that signals a grim reality for the species – and one that
leads us to ask #WhereAreTheTigers?
The last remaining wild tigers are spread out across only 7%
of their former territory. Large-scale farmers, timber industry workers and
developers continue to ravage native tiger habitats in Asia at a breakneck
pace, and as a result, most of these tigers are unable to find enough food to
feed themselves or their cubs. The World Wildlife Fund estimates
that the world’s forests are lost “at a rate of as many as 36 football fields
every minute.”
A tiger pugmark |
But even the wild tigers that can manage to sustain
themselves face a far more severe threat – their skin, bones, teeth, claws and
whiskers are all highly-prized on the black market, and despite international
efforts at regulation, poachers can fetch as much as $50,000 from the parts of
a single tiger. And with each successful sale, demand for these parts only
grows.
The crisis is by no means beyond our reach as Americans.
Sporting one of the largest captive tiger populations in the world, with most
outside of zoos and dedicated research facilities, the United States is
surprisingly lax when it comes to regulating tigers as pets. In many states,
buying a tiger from a breeder is easier than adopting a dog from a shelter, and
some don’t even require those who buy tigers to notify local authorities or
neighbors! For the estimated 5,000 tigers forced into private ownership, a lack
of attention by the US government often means a life of insufficient care, or
even death on the black market.
A worse fate still for these captive tigers can be found
across Asia, in commercial “tiger farms” that are still allowed to operate
legally by the Chinese and other governments. Despite a 1993 ban on the trade
and use of tiger parts in China and an international ban on the tiger trade in
1987, there is a growing demand for tiger parts and derived products among
Chinese elite as a status of wealth and influence. In the past decade alone,
the World Wildlife Fund reports that over 1,000 tigers, many from such tiger
farms, have been killed solely to meet the consistently high demand of Asian
consumers.
Blood of the Tiger by J.A. Mills |
Renowned tiger expert J.A. Mills describes in her recent
book TheBlood of the Tiger, an estimated 6,000 tigers are bred for their parts
like cattle on such farms, and hesitation to confront the Chinese government
for these atrocities allows them to operate without interference.
So, #WhereRtheTigers? They are forced into the shadows to
escape poachers, exiled from their historical range. They are being sold off in
small parts through illegal markets the world over. They are languishing in our
own backyards, longing for support. They are hidden away on tiger farms, where
they are treated as a commodity. They are dying by the thousands, and if
nothing changes, they soon won’t be anywhere at all.
Today, the Secretary of the Interior, Sally Jewell, concluded
a
trip to Vietnam where she met with government officials to discuss how the
US government and the Vietnamese government can work together to put an end to
the illegal wildlife trade. Her next stop is China, where she will have similar
discussions with top officials of the country that ranks #1 in the world for
the illegal wildlife trade.
We have a dream of helping tigers, and we know you do too.
But if we are to progress, we need to raise awareness, pressure governments and
the international community to regulate the treatment of tigers, and show
poachers, wildlife traffickers and tiger farm operators that their business
will not be tolerated. Please join us in spreading our #WhereRtheTigers
campaign on your favorite social media outlet, and stay with us for continuing
updates on our cause.
Stay tuned for our upcoming Global Tiger Day campaign on
July 29th, 2015 and ask yourself: #WhereRtheTigers?
Go Tigers!
National T4T Coalition Staff
________________________________________________________________
A special thanks to Justin Jacques, Communications Intern
from the National Wildlife Refuge Association for crafting this piece.
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