Asia-Pacific News
Fears that Sumatran tiger will be extinct in 2015
Feb 7, 2010, 10:54 GMT
Jakarta - The endangered Sumatran tiger in Indonesia's Riau province is predicted to become extinct in next five years due to illegal hunting and habitat losses as a major threat for their survival, an activist said on Sunday.
'With the conditions of the existing threats, Sumatran tigers in Riau is predicted to become extinct the most quickly in five years. It may start from the extinction of ecosystems, where tigers are left no longer allowed to breed,' said Osmantri from the Animal Trade Monitoring Coordinator of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) in Riau.
Based on WWF's data, the number of tigers left in Riau province, East Sumatra, only up to 30 or about 10 per cent of the wildlife population in the island of Sumatra.
The threat from habitat loss and illegal hunting are not comparable with the ability to breed tigers, the state-run Antara news agency quoted Osmantri as saying, explaining a female tiger can expect to live in the wild for 15 years.
During the lifetime, each individual can only give birth three times, he said. Sadly, only two maximum of the cubs are managed to survive until adulthood, while weak law enforcement is believed as the main cause of the difficulty of combating tiger poaching activities.
During the period 1998-2009, as many as 46 tigers were founded dead in connection with human conflicts and illegal hunting activity, meaning that an average of seven tigers had been murdered every-year in Riau province.
However, there is inequality linked with the process of law because there were only three cases of tiger poaching were end up in court in the same period of time.
The case of illegal hunting and killing tigers in Riau had been brought to court, including the 2001, 2004, and 2009.
'But jail sentences handed down by the judges did not trigger a deterrent effect because the perpetrators are only punished up to one year in prison,' Osmantri said.
'Law enforcement against poaching and killing tigers in Riau is the most weakest than other regions in Sumatra.'
Environmentalists said the destruction of the species' natural habitat by illegal logging triggered the rise of conflicts between the beasts and the humans living in nearby forests, saying tigers would not disturb humans if their habitat was not destroyed.
There are between 300 and 400 Sumatra tigers left in the wild. The Sumatran tiger is believed to be the last remaining sub-species of tiger indigenous to Indonesia. The Bali and Java tigers are believed to be extinct.

COMMENT
blog comments powered by DisqusLatest Headlines in Asia-Pacific
- 1. Chinese dissidents hail late democracy activist Fang Lizhi
- 2. China "worried" over planned North Korea rocket launch
- 3. Myanmar's opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi meets Karen rebels
- 4. Chinese schoolboy sells kidney to buy iPad, iPhone
- 5. Myanmar president invites Karen rebels to form party
Older Talkback
