This 2016 video is called Protecting the Siberian Tiger‘s Last Home.
From Wildlife Extra:
Russia to clamp down on wildlife crime
Kremlin boosts protection for tigers
October 2012. Trade, transportation and possession of endangered species will all be considered crimes under new legislation proposed by the Kremlin, following discussions with WWF.
Tiger hunting is probably the biggest factor in the decline of tigers this century which has seen the world has lost 97 per cent of its wild tigers, including four sub-species to extinction. There may be as few as 3,200 of the endangered animals remaining. But until now, law in the Russian Federation, home to many of the world’s remaining tigers, only considered the actual killing of an animal to be a crime. Poachers who are stopped carrying the animals or their parts claim they found them dead.
“It is a significant step towards protection of tigers and other endangered species threatened by trade and poaching,” said Igor Chestin, CEO of WWF Russia who was heavily involved in discussions with the government. Russia has agreed for its Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment to prepare the draft law in cooperation with WWF.
Tiger skins
Recently one man was found in possession of the remains of six tigers, another one with eight tiger skins. Under the current law they only might be eligible for an insignificant fine.
WWF and its partner TRAFFIC, the wildlife monitoring network, are campaigning for greater protection of threatened species such as rhinos, tigers and elephants. Demand for ivory, rhino horn and tiger parts from consumer markets in Asia is driving wild populations dangerously close to extinction. WWF is calling on governments to combat illegal wildlife trade and reduce demand for illicit endangered species products.
“Trade, transportation and possession of endangered species becoming a crime is a long-awaited measure that we believe will dramatically reduce poaching,” Chestin said.
Tiger habitat protection
WWF is also happy to see steps being made towards more protection for tiger habitats. The Primorsky region, where 90% of the Russian tigers live, was requested to ensure no commercial timber harvest takes place in the regional protected areas and nut harvesting zones. Regional administration was also ordered to prevent any commercial logging in upper and middle stream of the Bikin River.
Amur tigers
By the 1940s, hunting had driven the Amur tiger to the brink of extinction-with no more than 40 individuals remaining in the wild. The subspecies was saved when Russia became the first country in the world to grant the tiger full protection.
By the 1980s, the Amur tiger population had increased to around 500. Continued conservation and antipoaching efforts by many partners-including WWF-have helped keep the population stable at around 400 individuals. In 2010, the Russian Government adopted the Strategy for Tiger Conservation, making commitments to double the number of wild tigers by 2022 and to stiffen punishment for those caught smuggling tiger products.
Camera traps are typically used to capture images of endangered species for conservation purposes. But in a bid to increase anti-poaching efforts, special camera traps will be camouflaged and hidden in Russian forests to record illegal entry by would-be poachers: here.
Related articles
- Russia and China Set Up First Ever Transboundary Protected Area for Endangered Amur Tigers (prweb.com)
- Legislation to criminalize trafficking in endangered species or their body parts could be put before parliament as early as next summer (greatcatsoftheworld.wordpress.com)
- The Trade in Tiger Parts (greatcatsoftheworld.wordpress.com)
- Amur Leopard: The Cat That Should Have Died (greatcatsoftheworld.wordpress.com)
- Thai man caught with 16 tiger cubs in truck (abc.net.au)
- WWF Camera Trap Yields First-Time Video of Critically Endangered Sumatran Tiger and Cubs (prweb.com)
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I am sending this post to my son who is going to Sumatra this summer to study tigers. Thanks for the post!
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Yes, I hope that the anti-tiger poaching measures will work in Russia; and in Indonesia and elsewhere as well!
About tigers in Sumatra:
https://dearkitty1.wordpress.com/2008/01/11/paper-corporation-threatens-sumatran-rainforest/
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