Endangered Tigers Essay
Endangered Tigers Today wild tigers exist in Eastern Russia, China, Vietnam, Cambodia, North
Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Bhutan, India and Nepal. In order to live in the wild, tigers
need water to drink, animals to hunt, and vegetation in which to hide. As the mountains, jungles,
forests, and long grasses that have long been home to tigers disappear, so too, do tigers. Agricultural
expansion, timber cutting, new roads, human settlement, industrial expansion and hydroelectric
dams push tigers into smaller and smaller areas of land. These small areas of forests are surrounded
by rapidly growing and relatively poor human populations, including increasing numbers of illegal
hunters. Tigers compete with an expanding human...show more content...
Lacking funds, organization, and compensation for high risk work, training, camps inside the
protected areas, night patrols, and resources such as firearms, vehicles, and communication
equipment, the guards' enforcement of anti–hunting laws is limited. Habitat protection, when
combined with the promotion of alternatives to traditional Chinese remedies and stricter law
enforcement, is an important part of the strategy to save the tiger. The single greatest threat of
extinction that most Asian wildlife, especially the endangered tiger face, is the massive demand for
traditional medicine (McCarthy, Dorfman, & Robinson, 2004).
The use of tiger parts in Chinese medicine is nothing new, but it has only been in recent years that
the increase in the standard of living in Southeast Asia has made the remedies available to most
people. With more people wanting these traditional remedies, there has been a greater effect on
wildlife numbers and the demand for tiger parts. In many places in China, tiger parts are a delicacy
that is served at special private banquets. The use of tiger products and their medicines is seen as a
symbol of high status and wealth. Some remedies list tiger parts as an ingredient, but the real animal
parts are so expensive that often the medicines may have only trace elements, but even this is not
enough to discourage the continued
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