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Deforestation blamed for tiger maulings in Sumatramongabay.comFebruary 27, 2009 WWF says the three latest victims — killed this past weekend in Jambi Province — appeared to be working at an illegal logging camp. "As people encroach into tiger habitat, it's creating a crisis situation and further threatening this critically endangered sub-species," said Ian Kosasih, director of WWF’s Forest Program. "In light of these killings, officials have got to make public safety a top concern and put a stop to illegal clearance of forests in Sumatra."
The Sumatran tiger is imperiled from ongoing habitat destruction — about half of Sumatra's forests have been cleared in the past 25 years — as well as overhunting of its prey and poaching for the traditional Chinese medicine market. The Sumatran tiger is now down to about 450 individuals in the wild, making it one of the rarest subspecies of tiger. The Javan, Bali, and Caspain subspecies went extinct last century. WWF is urging the provincial government to crack down on illegal logging and forest clearing in Jambi, but work in other areas has shown that reducing deforestation alone will not be enough to save the tiger. Improved wildlife law enforcement and programs to build sustainable livelihoods for local people and reduce tiger-human conflict through modified agricultural and animal husbandry practices will be critical to protecting the great cat from extinction in the wild.
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