Tigers


Tigers are found in a wide range of habitats in Asia and the Russian Far East, in increasingly fragmented and isolated populations.
Less than 100 years ago, tigers prowled almost all of Asia.

They could be found from the forests of eastern Turkey and the Caspian region of Western Asia, all the way to the Indian sub-continent, China, and Indochina, south to Indonesia, and north to the Korean Peninsula and the Russian Far East.

Today, their range has been reduced to just 7% of its former size.

Tigers are now found in only 13 range states:
  • Bangladesh
  • Bhutan
  • Cambodia
  • China
  • India
  • Indonesia (Sumatra)
  • Lao PDR
  • Malaysia
  • Myanmar
  • Nepal
  • Russia
  • Thailand
  • Viet Nam
A few may still persist in North Korea.
All tigers need dense vegetation, the presence of large ungulate prey, and access to water to be able to survive.
Different tiger subspecies live in very different habitats with these features – including tropical rainforests, evergreen forests, mangrove swamps, grasslands, savannas, and temperate forests.

For example, in Bhutan tigers have been found at 4,000 meters, almost overlapping with snow leopards. But in the Sunderbans, tigers swim in mangroves with bull sharks and crocodiles.
Growing human populations, particularly since the 1940s, have both contracted and fragmented the tiger’s former range. 

While extensive habitat remains in some places, in most areas agriculture, clearing of forests for the timber trade, and rapid development – especially road networks – are forcing tigers into small, scattered islands of remaining habitat. Today, tigers only occur in scattered populations.

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