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Sumatran tiger blamed for killing two people is captured alive after marathon hunt

A captive Sumatran tiger. The species still live in the wild in the Aceh's Leuser Ecosystem. Photo by Rhett A. Butler

  • Authorities in Indonesia have captured alive a critically endangered Sumatran tiger blamed for the deaths of two people in an oil palm plantation.
  • The tiger has been moved to a wildlife rehabilitation center, where it will undergo medical tests ahead of being released back into the wild.
  • The capture averts a repeat of a near-identical case in March, in which villagers killed and mutilated a tiger blamed for attacking two members of a hunting party.
  • The whole incident, which an official described as the longest ever search-and-rescue operation for a Sumatran tiger, has highlighted the importance of protecting wildlife habitats, which often are lost to plantations or human settlements, driving the animals into conflict with people.

JAKARTA — Authorities in Indonesia have captured a Sumatran tiger blamed for killing two people earlier this year. They have moved the female tiger, nicknamed Bonita, to a wildlife rehabilitation center in West Sumatra province.

The capture of Bonita on April 20 in Riau province marked the end of the “longest rescue and evacuation effort for a Sumatran tiger in history,” according to Wiratno, the director-general of natural resources and ecosystem conservation at the Ministry of Environment and Forestry.

The hunt for the critically endangered Sumatran tiger (Panthera tigris sumatrae) lasted 107 days. It began after the first reported killing, on Jan. 3, when the tiger attacked three workers at an oil palm plantation in Riau’s Indragiri Hilir district. The tiger killed one of the workers, identified as Jumiati, 33, after she fell from a tree that she had climbed up to escape the animal.

The animal remained elusive, and struck again on March 5, when it reportedly killed a 34-year-old man, Yusri Efendi, who was passing through the same palm estate, run by the Malaysian company PT Tabung Haji Indo Plantations.

The ministry’s team finally managed to take down the tiger after hitting it twice with tranquilizer darts. Its goal was to capture the tiger alive, amid mounting protests from locals rattled by the two deaths, who threatened they would otherwise “kill the beast” themselves.

An adult male Sumatran tiger captured by camera trap. Image courtesy of WWF-Indonesia and Ministry of Environment and Forestry.

“Rescuing this Sumatran tiger has grabbed the special attention of the environment minister and the president, so we appreciate the work done by the team,” Wiratno said at a press conference in Pekanbaru, the Riau provincial capital, on April 21.

The tiger was immediately transferred to an animal rehabilitation center operated by the Arsari Djojohadikusumo Foundation in Dharmasraya district in neighboring West Sumatra province. It is expected to undergo a series of medical examinations before it is released back into the wild.

Wiratno said he had ordered the facility to provide him updates on the tiger’s condition.

The capture of Bonita averts a repeat of a near-identical case in neighboring North Sumatra province, where villagers speared a tiger to death and mutilated its body in March. The tiger had reportedly attacked and injured two people who were part of a hunting party out to catch the animal, which they considered a supernatural incarnation.

Conflicts between humans and wildlife flare up regularly across Sumatra, whose once vast swaths of forest have been cleared at alarming rates for commercial development, primarily palm oil and rubber plantations, as well as mines. There are an estimated 500 Sumatran tigers left in the wild, according to WWF. The species is listed by the IUCN as critically endangered, or just a step away from going extinct.

“We call on everyone to protect the habitat [of tigers], and boost patrols on these areas,” Wiratno said.

The Sumatran tiger is a key conservation focus for the Indonesian government and wildlife activists; two other tiger subspecies native to Indonesia, the Javan tiger (Panthera tigris sondaica) and the Bali tiger (Panthera tigris balica), were officially declared extinct in 2003 due to poaching and habitat loss — the same threats stalking the Sumatran tiger today.

Banner image: A captive Sumatran tiger. The species still live in the wild in pockets of forest in Sumatra. Photo by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay.

This story was reported by Mongabay’s Indonesia team and was first published on our Indonesian site on Apr. 22, 2018.

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