Authorities worldwide have seized tigers and parts equal to an average of 150 tigers a year over almost 23 years, with seizures in the first half of this year signalling the relentless pursuit of remaining wild tigers, a new TRAFFIC study revealed today.
Overall, whole tigers, dead and live, as well as a variety of tiger parts equal to a conservative estimate of 3,377 tigers were confiscated between January 2000 and June 2022 across 50 countries and territories, with data showing an increasing trend.
According to Skin and Bones: Tiger Trafficking Analysis from January 2000 – June 2022, the tigers and their parts were seized in 2,205 incidents, mostly in the 13 Tiger Range Countries.
India, home to more than half of the global wild tiger population, remains the top-ranked with the most incidents and number of tigers confiscated.
“The evidence clearly shows poaching and illegal trade are not temporary threats. Unless we want to watch wild tigers wiped out in our lifetime, immediate and time-bound actions must be a priority,” said Kanitha Krishnasamy, co-author of the report and Director for TRAFFIC in Southeast Asia.
Key findings:
Specific to the first half of 2022:
Southeast Asia highlights:
Illegal online trade:
Commodities in trade:
The report, launched ahead of the CITES CoP 19, forms part of TRAFFIC’s priorities, where the fate of tigers and other big cats will be a focus of discussions.
The authors of this report, aligned with TRAFFIC’s stand, have urged CITES parties to fully implement CITES Resolution Conf. 12.5 (Rev. CoP18) on Asian big cats (ABCs) and the associated CoP Decisions, which recommend a slew of actions covering improved legislation, enforcement, record keeping and actions to prevent tiger parts and derivatives from captive breeding facilities from entering the illegal trade chain - END
Other quotes
Co-author and Senior Wildlife Crime Analyst, Ramacandra Wong on Indonesia’s surging seizures in the first half of 2022: “It’s an ominous development for the Critically Endangered Sumatran tiger and a cautionary tale for all tiger subspecies. There’s never been a greater urgency to intensify the fight against wildlife crime in all range states.”
Tiger Trade Leader at WWF’s Tigers Alive Initiative, Heather Sohl on tiger parts seized: "The thousands of tiger parts seized are a testament to enforcement effort, but they also speak to the continued threats tigers face. Poaching, trade and demand for tigers and their parts persist, compounded by the tiger farms which add to the illicit trade. Strong action is needed by governments to combat the pressure this puts on wild tiger populations."
Distributed by Pressat