April 3, 2018

Most Tiger Reserves in Southeast Asia are Below Par. This must Change

Most Tiger Reserves in Southeast Asia are Below Par. This must Change

A Bengal tiger is on a prowl. India has the world's largest tiger population with some 2,500 animals left in the wild. Photo Credit: Flickr

Out of 112 tiger conservation areas in 11 countries around Southeast Asia and farther afield, only a little over a tenth (13%) meet global standards. Worse: a third of these areas are at risk of losing their tigers because of inadequate protection and poor management.

This is according to a new survey by the watchdog Conservation Assured Tiger Standards (CA|TS), which monitors tiger reserves around Asia.

Sad? You bet.

To protect Malaysia’s last tigers, you’ll need to protect their forests. Photo Credit: Wallpaper Pulse

In the survey the group’s researchers evaluated management practices at 112 sites in 11 tiger range countries, including Malaysia. These sites cover more than 200,000 square kilometers in all and account for some 70% of the world’s remaining wild tiger population. In addition to Malaysia, the countries surveyed included Thailand, Myanmar, Indonesia, Cambodia, Nepal, India, Bhutan, Bangladesh, China and Russia.

“[B]asic needs such as enforcement against poaching, engaging local communities and managing conflict between people and wildlife, remain weak for all areas surveyed,” the researchers note. Somewhat more encouragingly, they add that at two-thirds of the sites management practices were found to be “fair to strong,” which gives us some hope that resident tiger populations could be saved in coming years from further harm.

The gravest threat facing wild tigers, in addition to habitat loss, has been the threat of poaching. “From whisker to tail, every inch of a tiger is valuable to poachers and traded in illegal wildlife markets,” says Ginette Hemley, senior vice president for wildlife conservation at the World Wildlife Fund for Nature (WWF). “The fight to save tigers has united governments and conservation organizations, but wild tigers won’t rebound until there are enough boots on the ground protecting them.”

Yet despite the ever-present danger of poaching staff at most reserves are ill equipped to protect local tigers. At 85% of the areas surveyed staff do not have the wherewithal to go on patrols often enough, while at 61% of the areas in Southeast Asia there is only very limited anti-poaching enforcement in place, according to the researchers. Much of this has to do with a lack of funding, especially in Southeast Asia where only a third (35%) of areas have robust enough finances, as opposed to 86% of sites in South Asia, Russia and China.

“Unless governments commit to sustained investments in the protection of these sites, tiger populations may face the catastrophic decline that they have suffered over the last few decades,” Michael Baltzer, chair of the Executive Committee of CA|TS, notes in a press release by WWF. “This funding is needed urgently, particularly for many sites in Southeast Asia to support recovery of its tiger population.”

Agreed. Conservation efforts can be costly, but they are worth the money. The priceless wildlife of countries like Malaysia needs to be protected even at great cost.

An image shared widely online shows young Malaysians posing with the body of a dead tiger. Photo Credit: New Strait Times

Make no mistake: time is running out on wild tigers. A century ago some 100,000 tigers roamed far and wide across Asia, several thousands of them in Malaysia alone. Today a mere 4,000 or so tigers remain, almost all of them beleaguered throughout their range from Indonesia to Russia.

In Malaysia only somewhere between 250 and 350 eponymous Malayan tigers remain in the wild, which is a great shame for a nation that prides itself on its wildlife and has long seen tigers as a talismanic national treasure (if only in principle).

The situation is dire in every tiger range country, however. India is home to around 2,500 tigers, which is over half of the world’s wild tiger population. Next come Russia with more than 400 tigers, Indonesia with almost as many, then Malaysia and Nepal with around 200. Even the loss of a few dozen more tigers in many of these countries could have catastrophic consequences for local tiger populations.

In order to boost wild tiger populations everywhere, or at least stop them from falling further, conservation efforts need to be strengthen. Governments have a vital role to play in that. “Ineffective management of tiger conservation areas leads to tiger extinction,” warns S.P. Yadav, an expert at the international conservationist outfit Global Tiger Forum.

“To halt and reverse the decline of wild tigers, effective management is thus the single most important action,” he elucidates. “To achieve this, long-term investment in tiger conservation areas is absolutely essential, and this is a responsibility that must be led by tiger range governments.”

Agreed.

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