Amur
Tiger (Siberian Tiger)
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Name: Panthera tigris altaica (sometimes called the Amur,
Siberian, Manchurian, Ussurian, or Northeast China tiger).
Description: Amur tigers are the largest of the tiger subspecies.
Males can grow up to 3.3 meters (10' 9") long and weigh up to 300
kilograms (660 pounds). Females are smaller, measuring about 2.6 meters (8
1/2 feet) from head to tail, and weighing about 100 to 167 kilograms (200
to 370 pounds). Their orange coloring is paler than the coloring of other
tigers. Its stripes are brown rather than black, and are widely spaced. It
has a white chest and belly, and a thick white ruff of fur around its
neck.
Distribution: Wild Amur tigers are found primarily in two
populations in the Russian Far East, the primary population of about 450
individuals covers 156,000 sq km in Primosky and Khabarovski Krais, and
another small population of about 35 individuals occurs on the
Russia-China border and into northeast China. Sightings of Amur tigers in
Changbaishan, near the Chinese border with North Korea, were reported in
Chinese newspapers in 1990, and some are still found along the Russian
border. The Cat Specialist Group estimates that there are probably fewer
than 35 Amur tigers in China. Some conservation groups are working to grow
the North China population and improve the landscape management in the
area to secure and grow this small tiger population.
Biology: Amur tigers give birth year-round with a peak in late
summer. They reproduce at about 4 years of age with a litter of 1-4 cubs
after a gestation period of 103 days. The primary prey of the Amur tiger
is elk and wild boar. In the Russian Far East these prey species are
unevenly distributed and move seasonally. As a result, the territory size
of Amur tigers is quite large, ranging from 100-400 km2 (39–154 mile2) for
females to 800–1,000 km2 (309–390 mile2) for males. Tigers compete with
wolves for this limited prey base and researchers have shown that wolves
have increased in numbers where tigers have been reduced, while recovery
of tiger numbers reduces wolf populations through competitive exclusion.
Status in the wild: About 450 Siberian Tigers live in the Russian
Far East, but the tiger conservation plan for Russia indicates that a
population of about 700 tigers is feasible for the region. In this
century, the Amur tiger, has survived four wars, two revolutions, and now
an onslaught on its forests. Between 1910 and 1947, tigers were hunted as
game or pests in Russia. According to some accounts, this depleted tiger
numbers to as few as 50 individuals. In 1947 The Soviet Union banned tiger
hunting allowing them some respite but poaching became a rampant problem
during the economic and political chaos surrounding the 1991 collapse of
the Soviet Union. The Law of the Russian Federation on Environmental
Protection and Management of 1992 reestablished legal protection for Amur
tigers but in 1993, Russia’s Primoski Krai Ecology Committee estimated
that 60 tigers were still being poached each year from a population of
200-300 tigers. Continued loss at this rate meant that Siberian tigers
could have become extinct by the year 2000. In December 1993, an
international cooperative effort lead by Russian authorities and several
foreign NGO’s agreed to a detailed plan to save Amur tigers with two main
objectives 1) to stabilize tiger populations by the year 2000 and 2) to
secure sound tiger habitat to ensure that a stable Amur tiger population
would last well into the next century.
Inspection Tiger confiscation 2002 - Phoenix Fund.A significant investment
of funds in anti-poaching, human-tiger conflict mitigation, education and
habitat management work in ensued over the next 10 years. Save The Tiger
Fund poured 2.7 million into tiger conservation work between 1995 and 2004
alonside several other conservation grant-making organizations. The plan
worked, and by 2005, a census of tigers in the Russian Far East indicated
that about 450 tigers remained in the Russian Far East (334-417 adult
tigers along with 97-112 cubs) indicating that tiger numbers have
stabilized since the last Russia-wide census in 1996 (330-371 adult
tigers, with 85-105 cubs).
Several ongoing threats have been identified for wild tiger conservation
including poaching and human-tiger conflict. Only about 20% of Russia's
tiger population is found in protected areas. Outside these areas,
commercial logging and hunting of ungulates are on the increase. One
9-year study convincingly demonstrated that tigers living near primary
roads died prematurely compared to their counterparts in roadless areas.
Captive breeding: The captive program for Amur tigers is the
largest and longest managed program for any of the subspecies. The Amur
tiger served as one of the models for the creation of scientifically
managed programs for species in captivity in zoos and aquariums worldwide.
According to the 1997 International Tiger Studbook there are about 501
Amur tigers managed in zoos. This captive population is descended from 83
wild-caught founders. For the most part, the Amur tiger is considered
secure in captivity, with a large, genetically diverse and stable
population.
The Amur tiger global captive population is divided primarily into two
well-managed regional populations, the North American Species Survival
Plan population of about 150 tigers and the European Breeding Program
population of about 225 tigers. Another 90 or so Amur tigers are
maintained in zoos in Japan, but the level of captive management of this
population is undetermined. Tigers are exchanged between the the North
American Species Survival Plan population and the European Breeding
Program to maximize gene diversity in the two populations.
Gene drop analyses conducted on the Amur population revealed that 96.5% of
the gene diversity has been retained in the population representing 14.233
founder genome equivalents from 51 founders. Founder representation in the
population continues to approach target levels. The mean inbreeding
coefficient of the managed population is 0.017
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