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201507Mar23:03

Rare fam­ily por­trait of Amur Tigers – the first-​ever to include an adult male

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 07 March 2015 | mod­i­fied 07 March 2015
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Amurtiger sredneussuriiskyThe Wildlife Con­ser­va­tion Society’s Rus­sia Pro­gram, in part­ner­ship with the Sikhote-​Alin Bios­phere Reserve and Udegeiskaya Leg­enda National Park, released a cam­era trap slideshow of a fam­ily of Amur tigers in the wild show­ing an adult male with family.

Shown fol­low­ing the “tiger dad” along the Russ­ian for­est is an adult female and three cubs. Sci­en­tists note this is a first in terms of pho­tograph­ing this behav­iour, as adult male tigers are usu­ally soli­tary. Also included was a photo com­pos­ite of a series of images show­ing the entire fam­ily as they walked past the a cam­era trap over a period of two minutes.

.…. These images con­firm that male Amur tigers do par­tic­i­pate in fam­ily life, at least occasionally ….…
Svet­lana Souty­rina, Deputy Direc­tor for Sci­en­tific Pro­grams at the Sikhote-​Alin Bios­phere Reserve, and for­mer WCS Rus­sia employee »

Wildlife Con­ser­va­tion Soci­ety (WCS) Rus­sia Direc­tor Dr. Dale Miquelle said, “Although WCS’s George Schaller doc­u­mented spo­radic famil­ial groups of Ben­gal tigers as early as the 1960s, this is the first time such behav­iour has been pho­tographed for Amur tigers in the wild. These pho­tos pro­vide a small vignette of social inter­ac­tions of Amur tigers, and pro­vide an evoca­tive snap­shot of life in the wild for these mag­nif­i­cent animals.”

The pho­tos resulted from a 20142015 project estab­lish­ing a net­work of cam­era traps across both Sikhote-​Alin Bios­phere Reserve and Udegeiskaya Leg­enda National Park (adja­cent pro­tected areas). The goal of the effort is to gain a bet­ter under­stand­ing about the num­ber of endan­gered Amur tigers in the region. Although results are still being exam­ined, the biggest sur­prise was a remark­able series of 21 pho­tographs that showed the entire fam­ily of tigers pass­ing the same cam­era trap (cam­eras acti­vated by motion) in the span of two minutes.

Svet­lana Souty­rina, who set these cam­era traps and con­veyed her ela­tion at the dis­cov­ery, said: “We have col­lected hun­dreds of pho­tos of tigers over the years, but this is the first time we have recorded a fam­ily together. These images con­firm that male Amur tigers do par­tic­i­pate in fam­ily life, at least occa­sion­ally, and we were lucky enough to cap­ture one such moment.”

Cam­era trap slideshow of a fam­ily of Amur tigers in the wild show­ing an ‘tiger dad’ with fam­ily — adult female and three cubs:


(Source: Wildlife Con­ser­va­tion Soci­ety YouTube channel)


The exact pop­u­la­tion size of Amur tigers is dif­fi­cult to esti­mate. Every ten years an ambi­tious, range-​wide sur­vey is con­ducted that involves hun­dreds of sci­en­tists, hunters, and vol­un­teers. The results of the most recent of these sur­veys, under­taken in Feb­ru­ary 2015, will be released by sum­mer. In 2005, the last time a range-​wide sur­vey of Amur tigers was con­ducted, it was esti­mated there were 430500 tigers esti­mated remain­ing in the wild.

The WCS Rus­sia Pro­gram plays a crit­i­cal role in mon­i­tor­ing tigers and their prey species in the Russ­ian Far East and min­i­miz­ing poten­tial con­flicts between tigers and human com­mu­ni­ties. WCS works to save tiger pop­u­la­tions and their remain­ing habi­tat in nine range coun­tries across Asia.

This pro­gram has been sup­ported by the Liz Clai­borne and Art Orten­berg Foun­da­tion, the Colum­bus Zoo Con­ser­va­tion Fund, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Rhi­noc­eros & Tiger Con­ser­va­tion Fund, the AZA Tiger Species Sur­vival Plan’s Tiger Con­ser­va­tion Cam­paign, and the US For­est Ser­vice Inter­na­tional Programs.



(Source: WCS news release, 06.03.2015)


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Goal: 7000 tigers in the wild

Tiger range countries map

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

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