With more tigers in captivity in the U.S. than survive in the wild, the United States needs a centralized federal database to monitor the big cats, World Wildlife Fund (WWF) said this week.

“Weak U.S. regulations could be helping to fuel the multimillion dollar international black market for tiger parts,” WWF said in a statement about a new review released by WWF and TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network.

WWF released a new online tool that allows users to learn about their states’ captive tiger regulations and how weak oversight puts wild tigers and human safety at risk.

According to WWF:

  • As few as 3,200 tigers are left in the wild across Asia, down from 100,000 a hundred years ago. America’s 5,000-plus captive tigers are mostly kept by private individuals, not zoos.
  • The tigers are often in deplorable conditions and in states that do not have laws or regulations that require close monitoring or regulatory oversight.
  • Lack of sufficient state or federal regulation makes it effectively impossible to determine the number of tigers in the U.S. at any given time, where they are kept and what happens to their body parts–highly prized on the black market in Asia–when they die.
captive tiger photo.jpg

NGS stock photo of abandoned tigers at a shelter in Arkansas by Michael Nichols

Ticking Time Bomb

“In addition to being a threat to communities, captive tigers in the U.S. are a ticking time bomb for the illegal wildlife trade,” said Leigh Henry, WWF senior policy officer for Species Conservation.

“Demand for tiger parts and products is one of the leading threats to the continued survival of the species in the wild. A nationwide database is essential to ensure that captive cats don’t end up in traditional folk medicine, tiger wine, or as somebody’s hearth rug or wall hanging.”

Among the findings in the review “Tigers Among US”:

  • A patchwork of federal laws governs the possession, sale and exhibition of captive tigers. However, due to a host of exceptions exemptions, and loopholes, federal agencies charged with implementing these laws have no mandate to maintain a current inventory of how many tigers are in the country, where they are, who possesses them, when they die or how they are disposed of.
  • 17 states allow the keeping of tigers by individuals with a state permit or registration (Iowa, Oregon and Washington recently banned tiger possession but have systems in place to regulate tigers that were grandfathered in prior to enactment of the bans).
  • 8 states have no laws on captive tigers.
  • 28 states have laws banning the possession of tigers in private collections.

Among the report’s recommendations:

  • A central reporting system and database for all captive tigers held within U.S. borders should be created under new or existing law. There should be no exemptions or exceptions.
  • Any person or facility owning a tiger should report on the number of tigers held, births, deaths, mortality and transfer or sale.
  • All tiger deaths should be reported immediately and the carcasses disposed of through cremation by a licensed facility.
  • State and federal law enforcement should be provided with resources to conduct undercover investigations to eliminate markets for tiger parts and detect international smuggling attempts.

“In November, world leaders will gather at a Global Tiger Summit in St. Petersburg, Russia–the world’s first global summit focused on saving a single species from extinction,” WWF said. “They will discuss a range-wide recovery plan for tigers that includes how to protect breeding populations, tiger landscapes and address poaching and international trade. The goal of the Summit is to double the number of wild tigers by the next Year of the Tiger in 2022.”

U.S. Responsibility

“The United States government has been a global leader in promoting the conservation of tigers, but it also has a responsibility to manage the tigers in its own backyard to prevent them from entering illegal trade,” Henry said. “By clamping down on this issue, we can better cooperate with other nations holding large numbers of captive tigers to prevent trade in these animals from threatening their wild counterparts.”

Tigers Among US is an updated review of the 2008 TRAFFIC report Paper Tigers?: The Role of the U.S. Captive Tiger Population in the Trade in Tiger Parts. Click here for a copy of the full report.

Posted from media materials submitted by WWF.

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Comments

  1. Nigel Davers
    United Kingdom
    December 28, 2012, 8:24 am

    The fact that the tiger population has decreased from 100,000 to 3200 in the wild, besides urban increase is down to money alone, a poacher can earn several years wages in one kill, to sell for body parts to the Orientals for medicine.
    Until you re-educate the Chinese to stop this practice you will not stop the killing of these lovely animals until everyone of them have been killed. I practice oriental medicine and deplore the use of animal parts that has no use whatsoever in curing any illness, only the people that sell them become rich

  2. VIKRAM
    INDIA
    March 19, 2012, 12:46 pm

    on one side of the world its extinction, and on the other side this is the case , god made them beautiful and that beauty is making them suffer like never before.GOD will never forgive us.

  3. Sunil Talati
    Holland
    October 22, 2011, 5:52 pm

    I knew this was happening but I am still shocked. I have been working on volunteer projects for 4 years and always get told about how badly animals are treated in India, Malaysia or China. Then this year England I heard how easy it is to keep a bird of prey and now this. Truly shocking.

  4. Ankush Kumar
    Dhanbad, India
    August 21, 2011, 8:35 am

    Altough keeping tigers in private is not good both for the owners and the tigers as well… There breed should be checked and if found alright, then they should be released to the wild of india, bangladesh, malaysia, and other tiger habitats…

  5. Moya
    Imphal
    August 20, 2011, 6:35 pm

    Words and meetings aren’t just enough. There has to be a way to hasten the law for prohibition of keeping Tigers as pet. It is not just about fuelling the black market, it’s inhuman to keep a big expensive animal within the ambit of one’s personal economy. Tigers survive in the wild as dominant solitary animals, and here’s just the concern of black marketing without a slightest hint given on how stessed they might have felt under the daily companionship of humans. At least an enclosed animal in a zoological park is less bothered by people by giving them space. They have to be taken away from the people who claim to love them and keep them as pet to rescue programmes for resettlement, which I doubt is very limited in number in the US. Let us please know that freedom is not just about us enjoying it but granting others as well.

  6. Dr.Sandeep K Jain
    Ludhiana(India)
    August 11, 2011, 11:44 pm

    They must have got genetic abnormality due to inbreeding.The US Govt should regularise the captive Tiger facilities and make Tough Rules and regulations or confiscate thesre animals and keep in rescue centres till they are rehabilitated at suitable habitat.