Removing illegal snares to protect China’s tigers06/02/2012 14:13:45
Volunteers braves freezing temperatures February 2012: Nearly 200 snares have been removed in north east China, in a bid to protect the nation's remaining population of critically endangered Amur tigers. The group braved freezing temperatures and deep snow as they searched the northeastern province of Heilongjiang to clear a total of 162 illegal wire snares set by poachers. Fifty-nine volunteers, including doctors, computer engineers, public servants and college students, worked side by side with World Conservation staff in the six-day event. Tiger found dead in one snare The snares are set to catch animals like rabbits and roe deer, but they sometimes catch tigers. Last October, a tiger was found dead in a snare near the city of Mishan in Heilongjiang Province. The snare removal campaign was organised by Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), Harbin Newspaper Company, the Forestry Department of Heilongjiang Province, and the Forestry Industry Bureau of Heilongjiang Province. Amur tigers exist in very low numbers in China, though conservationists are encouraged by increasing signs of these big cats as they venture from the nearby Russian Far East where several hundred remain. Latest reports by WCS suggest that fewer than 3,500 tigers remain in the wild; 1,000 are breeding females.
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It is good to know that some younger Chinese are beginning to understand more of the plight that tigers are in. The species will not be saved unless more Chinese are educated about wildlife and their needs. They also need to pass the message on that Chinese Traditional Medicine does not work.
Posted by: Andrea Polden | 10 Feb 2012 23:39:56