The first evidence for the past presence of the tiger . . . It is probable that tigers first entered Palawan from Borneo and established a population in the Middle Pleistocene some 620 ka or 420 ka during periods when the expansion of the polar ice sheets reduced relative sea levels to their lowest at ca − 130 m (Rohling et al , 1998, Waelbroeck et al , 2002, Bintanja et al , 2006)
White Rhino | Species | WWF - World Wildlife Fund Also known as the square-lipped rhinoceros, white rhinos have a square upper lip with almost no hair Two genetically different subspecies exist the northern and southern white rhino, and are found in two different regions in Africa As of March 2018, there are only two rhinos of the northern white rhino left, both of which are female
Saving tigers from extinction requires many hands as faculty . . . India, where around seventy percent of the world’s wild tiger population roams, has become a second (and often, first) home to researchers working in the field with this apex species This summer, University faculty and students from a variety of fields visited India to engage around the interdisciplinary nature of tiger conservation efforts
South China Tiger - Save Chinas Tigers In 1977 tigers were classified as protected and hunting was prohibited By 1982, an estimated 150-200 South China tigers remained in the wild The South China tiger is the smallest tiger subspecies with the exception of the Sumatran tiger Males measure 230 to 265 cm (91 to 104 in) and weigh 110 to 175 kg (243 to 385 lb)
Study finds India doubled its tiger population in a decade The number of tigers grew from an estimated 1,706 tigers in 2010 to around 3,682 in 2022, according to estimates by the National Tiger Conservation Authority, making India home to roughly 75% of
Bangladesh’s tiger conservation efforts win with rise in . . . The tiger surveys at a glance According to the last survey conducted in 2018, there were 114 tigers in the Sundarbans in Bangladesh According to the Tiger Census 2015, the tiger population was only 106 in the Bangladesh part of the Sundarbans, down from 440 in 2004