World Population Clock: 8. 2 Billion People (LIVE, 2025 . . . The United Nations projects world population will reach 10 billion in the year 2060 9 Billion (2037) World population is expected to reach 9 billion in the year 2037 8 2 Billion (current) The current world population is 8,213,269,530 as of Friday, March 28, 2025 according to the most recent United Nations estimates elaborated by Worldometer
100 Years Ago 100,000 Tigers Roamed the World, Now There Are . . . More camera-trap installations will increase tiger monitoring and assessment Just recently, a camera trap in the Bumdeling Wildlife Sanctuary of Bhutan recorded a tiger in a forest where they have not been seen for almost two decades “Tiger populations are rising for the first time in a century,” said Carter Roberts, president and CEO of
Tiger Conservation Status Guide 2022 - Project Endangered Tigers For the first time in awhile, tiger numbers in several countries are on the rise thanks to a global commitment to work towards the “Tx2” goal set in 2010 to double the number of wild tigers Tiger population recovery was achieved in India by productive tiger conservation measures, improved forest management and by reducing human tiger conflict
Finding Space for Tigers - NASA Earth Observatory In the past two centuries, tigers have lost at least 93 percent of their historical range, which once spanned Eurasia Today, the big cats live in just 10 countries, mostly in Asia Scientists estimate that there are only about 3,700 to 5,500 wild tigers left, though that is an increase from an estimated low of 3,200 individuals in 2010
Tiger populations increased by 40 percent since 2015 According to a new population assessment conducted by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), an estimated 3,726 to 5,578 tigers currently live around the world – which represents a 40 percent increase since 2015 While part of this increase can simply be the result of improvements in monitoring, conservation efforts
Countries With The Greatest Number Of Wild Tigers The next country on the list of high tiger populations is Russia, with around 433 wild tigers, as per the latest national tiger census conducted in the country in 2015 This number shows a slight increase from the previous survey conducted in 2005, which placed the tiger population at around 360