The Cat Comes Back.

AuthorANGIER, NATALIE
PositionProtection of endangered tigers

Do tigers have nine lives? The nearly extinct cats aren't out of the woods yet, but they're making a comeback.

An old Vietnamese legend explaining how the tiger got its stripes tells of a man who once lashed the big cat to a tree trunk and set the tree on fire. The powerful tiger strained against the flaming ropes until it finally broke free, escaping extinction, but with black marks from the burning ropes seared into his fur.

Real tigers, it turns out, may be just as tough when it comes to fighting for survival. Less than a decade ago, researchers believed that prospects were grim for the world's largest cats. People had taken over much of the land once ruled by tigers and hunted down so many of them--along with the animals that tigers fed on--that by 2000, biologists predicted, tigers would effectively be extinct.

But now, "we're all very encouraged, which is very different from how we felt five or six years ago," says Ginette Hemley, vice president for species conservation at the World Wildlife Fund. "We won't be able to save the tiger everywhere, but in some areas there's been real progress."

Tiger populations have actually grown in eastern Siberia, Nepal, and some parts of India. In the Ranthambhore forest south of Delhi, a 1993 census found 20 tigers, at most, left in the region's 318 square miles. The latest tally suggests that figure has doubled and is still rising.

Even in countries where biologists feared the tiger was doomed, including Sumatra, Burma, Thailand, and Cambodia, there are encouraging signs. "We thought Sumatra was a loss," says John Seidensticker, curator of mammals at the Smithsonian Institution's National Zoological Park in Washington, D.C. "But there are pockets where survey data show there are good levels of tigers, more than we expected to be found."

QUESTIONABLE FUTURE

The animal's survival, however, is by no means certain. Peter Jackson, chairman of the Cat Specialist Group of the World Conservation Union in Switzerland, estimates that there are only 5,000 to 7,000 tigers left in all of Asia. A century ago, there were probably 10 times that number.

Still, progress is being made, and biologists attribute the tiger's comeback to several factors. In recent years, many Asian countries have cracked down harshly on poachers, who...

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