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WWFs Impact on Tiger Recovery | Publications | WWF WWF has invested or leveraged over US $200m across 10 offices, 14 landscapes, and 50 heartlands — those areas identified as having the highest potential for tiger recovery However, despite the positive trends in wild tiger numbers, it is important to acknowledge that these gains are fragile and have not been uniform across Asia’s sub-regions
WWF reveal increasing tiger populations in Year of the Tiger . . . The global tiger population is finally increasing after more than a century of gradual decline, a new study from WWF reveals Since the last Tiger Summit of 2010, several restoration efforts have contributed to the animal's recovery However, the WWF warns that they still face serious threats, with tigers likely extinct in Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam
Extinct Tasmanian Tigers May Have Survived Longer Than . . . Extinct Tasmanian Tigers May Have Survived Longer Than Previously Thought Though the last documented thylacine died in 1936, a new study based on alleged sightings suggests the species lived for
Catastrophic 73% decline in the average size of global . . . Catastrophic 73% decline in the average size of global wildlife populations in just 50 years reveals a ‘system in peril’ WWF’s flagship Living Planet Report details sharp declines in monitored wildlife populations with the steepest drops recorded in Latin America and the Caribbean (95%), Africa (76%) and Asia–Pacific (60%), followed by North America (39%) and Europe and Central Asia (35%)
WCS Statement on 40 Percent Increase of Tiger Numbers WCS Statement on 40 Percent Increase of Tiger Numbers New IUCN Tiger Assessment estimates as many as 5,500 tigers worldwide “Although we still have a very long way to go, the new assessment shows that the tiger can be saved There are more wild tigers alive today than in 2010, the result of range-state governments and partners committing to very focused protection of the species and its