The decline and impending extinction of the South China tiger


Autoria(s): Tilson, R; TraylorHolzer, K; Jiang, QM
Data(s)

1997

Resumo

The South China tiger Panthera tigris amoyensis is the rarest of the five living tiger subspecies, the most critically threatened and the closest to extinction. No wild South China tigers have been seen by officials for 25 years and one was last brought into captivity 27 years ago. The 19 reserves listed by the Chinese Ministry of Forestry within the presumed range of the tiger are spatially fragmented and most are too small to support viable tiger populations. Over the last 40 years wild populations have declined from thousands to a scattered few. Despite its plight and occasional anecdotal reports of sightings by local people, no intensive field study has been conducted on this tiger subspecies and its habitat. The captive population of about 50 tigers, derived from six wild-caught founders, is genetically impoverished with low reproductive output. Given the size and fragmentation of potential tiger habitat, saving what remains of the captive population may be the only option left to prevent extinction of this tiger subspecies, and even this option is becoming increasingly less probable. This precarious dilemma demands that conservation priorities be re-evaluated and action taken immediately to decide if recovery of the wild population will be possible.

Identificador

http://159.226.149.42/handle/152453/5133

http://www.irgrid.ac.cn/handle/1471x/50904

Direitos

The decline and impending extinction of the South China tiger

Fonte

Tilson, R; TraylorHolzer, K; Jiang, QM.The decline and impending extinction of the South China tiger,31,243-252,(SCI-E):

Palavras-Chave #Ecology
Tipo

期刊论文