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The Malayan tiger is a critically endangered species with fewer than 150 individuals left in the wild as of 2022. Learn about the causes and consequences of its decline, and the conservation efforts by WWF-Malaysia and other partners.
- The Last Days of the Malayan Tiger | WWF Malaysia
By 2010, as few as 3,200 wild tigers remained, squeezed into...
- The Last Days of the Malayan Tiger | WWF Malaysia
7 mar 2022 · It’s now 2022, and it’s estimated that there are only about 150 wild tigers left. Why have conservation efforts since failed to work?
The Malayan tiger is a critically endangered subspecies of tiger native to Peninsular Malaysia. As of 2014, the population was estimated at 80–120 mature individuals, and the habitat loss and poaching are the main threats to its survival.
Learn about the Malayan tiger, a critically endangered subspecies of tiger found only in Peninsular Malaysia. Discover its distinctive features, threats, population status and how you can help save it.
17 sty 2024 · With just 150 left in the wild, the Malaysian tiger is critically endangered. That's why wildlife photographer Emmanuel Rondeau joined forces with WWF-Malaysia, to take on the near-impossible...
28 lip 2020 · By 2010, as few as 3,200 wild tigers remained, squeezed into a mere 7% of their historical range. The Java, Bali and Caspian tigers were extinct; the South China tiger functionally extinct – they were too few and too far apart to constitute a viable population.
21 lip 2022 · Representing 76% of the global tiger population, South Asia’s tigers are gaining numbers, particularly in India and Nepal, from where new population estimates are expected any day. In Northeast Asia, numbers are relatively stable in Russia and likely increasing along the border with China.