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Name: Panthera tigris amoyensis (South China Tiger)
Description: The South China tiger is one of the smallest tiger
subspecies. Male tigers measure about 2.5 meters (8 feet) from head to
tail and weigh approximately 150 kilograms (330 pounds). Female tigers are
smaller, measuring about 2.3 meters (7 1/2 feet) long. They weigh
approximately 110 kilograms (240 pounds). The short, broad stripes of the
South China tiger are spaced far apart compared to those of Bengal and
Siberian tigers.
Distribution: The South China tiger was once found in central and
eastern China.
Biology: Little is known about the specific biology of this tiger
subspecies.
Status in the wild: The South China tiger is the most critically
endangered of all tiger subspecies The current status of wild South China
tigers is vague. Only 40 years ago there were reputed to be more than
4,000 tigers, but the government declared them pests, and they were hunted
mercilessly. A 1987 field survey by Chinese scientists reported a few
tigers remaining in the Guangdong mountains bordering Hunan and Jiangxi,
and another survey in 1990 noted evidence of about a dozen tigers in 11
reserves in the remote mountains of Guangdong, Hunan, and Fujian Provinces
of South China. No tigers were seen. The only evidence came from anecdotal
stories of former hunters (at least they claimed to have stopped hunting).
An unconfirmed report from the Ministry of Forestry in 1995 suggests that
the wild population is fewer than 20 individuals.
The current situation is that no wild tigers have been seen anywhere by
Chinese officials for more than 20 years. The Chinese Ministry of Forestry
lists 21 reserves within the presumed range of the tiger, and Chinese
specialists believe between 20 and 30 tigers are still left in the wild.
The last time a wild tiger was seen in the wild was in 1990 and it is
likely that it is already extinct in the wild.
Captive breeding: According to the 1995 South China Tiger Studbook
the captive population of 48 South China tigers is confined to 19 Chinese
zoos. They are descended from only six wild-caught tigers (about 120
tigers descended from 30 wild-caught tigers would be closer to the ideal).
The last time that a wild tiger was brought into captivity was 20 years
ago. The situation for the future does not look good. One group is
attempting to ‘rewild’ captive South China tigers on a reserve in South
Africa so that wild populations of South China Tigers can be
re-established.
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