• Slide number 0
    African lion (Pan­thera leo)
  • Slide number 1
    Chee­tah (Aci­nonyx juba­tus)
  • Slide number 2
    Clouded leop­ard (Neo­fe­lis neb­u­losa) | more info
  • Slide number 3
    Euro­pean wild­cat (Felis sil­vestris)
  • Slide number 4
    Jaguar (Pan­thera onca)
  • Slide number 5
    Jaguarundi (Her­pail­u­rus yagouaroundi)
  • Slide number 6
    Puma, Moun­tain lion, Cougar (Puma con­color)
  • Slide number 7
    Ocelot (Leop­ar­dus pardalis)
  • Slide number 8
    Pal­las’ cat, Manul (Oto­colobus manul)
  • Slide number 9
    Sand cat (Felis mar­garita)
  • Slide number 10
    Ser­val (Lep­tail­u­rus ser­val)
  • Slide number 11
    Snow leop­ard (Pan­thera uncia) | more info
  • Slide number 12
    South Chines tiger (Pan­thera tigris ssp. amoyen­sis)

201024Dec16:53

No more tigers in the wild in 2022! No way!

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 24 Decem­ber 2010 | mod­i­fied 23 Novem­ber 2010
Archived

Hosted by Russ­ian Prime Min­is­ter Vladimir Putin, the Tiger Sum­mit is the first time world lead­ers have met to dis­cuss the fate of just one species. So, that’s the first suc­cess! The Tiger Sum­mit takes place from 2124 Novem­ber, and today the Global Tiger Recov­ery Pro­gram was endorsed!! These fund­ing com­mit­ments of the coun­tries that still have wild tigers, sup­port and show the way for what is needed to save one of Mother Nature most beau­ti­ful crea­tures. Hope­fully, this ini­ti­ates more effort and money to do what we should have done years ago. (Source: WWF web­site, 23.11.2010)

UN Biodiversity decade
WWF Stop Wildlife Crime
Amur leopard conservation
End Ivory-funded Terrorism
Support Rewilding Europe
Snow Leopard Trust

Goal: 7000 tigers in the wild

Tiger range countries map

Tiger map” (CC BY 2.5) by Sander­son et al., 2006.

about zoos and their mis­sion regard­ing breed­ing endan­gered species, nature con­ser­va­tion, bio­di­ver­sity and edu­ca­tion, which of course relates to the evo­lu­tion of species.
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