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Tigers in Trouble - ReadWorks Wild tigers are in trouble They could soon become extinct, which means there will be no tigers left In only 100 years, the number of tigers in the world has dropped from 100,000 to only 3,200 Two major
Staggering 73% decline in wildlife populations in Just 50 . . . Notably, India is home to the largest population of wild tigers globally The All-India Tiger Estimation 2022 estimated a mean of 3,682 tigers, a significant increase from the 2,967 estimated in 2018
The rise, fall, and return of India’s tigers India not only achieved this milestone but did so through science-driven policies, strong governmental commitment, and widespread public support In the past two decades, tiger occupancy in the country has expanded by 30% Today, it is home to 75% of the world’s wild tigers (3,167 as of 2022), occupying approximately 138,200 km² of habitat
Tigers on the Rebound | Magazine Articles | WWF WWF launched the Year of the Tiger campaign in 2010 and rallied global commitments to double the number of wild tigers by 2022 In early 2013, 120 tiger researchers fanned out across some of the wildest sections of India and Nepal to assess the status of that work That team completed the first
A mission to restore and expand tiger habitats . . . - WWF Tigers While recent conservation efforts may have led to a global increase in wild tiger numbers – which were driven to a record low of 3,200 in 2010 – tigers are currently restricted to a decreasing 5 percent of their original range, scattered across fragmented islands of habitat in just 10 countries in Asia