Up until the 1950s, we had Caspian Tigers (Panthera tigris virgata) all over Central Asia, ranging from Turkey to China. Due to hunting, poisoning, and hunting of their food sources, the Caspian became extinct, but now scientists are trying to reintroduce tigers back into this area. Sadly de-extinction is not really viable at the moment, so we cannot get the Caspian tiger back unless we improve our de-extinction methods first, but instead the scientists are wanting to bring the Siberian tiger into the area where the Caspian tiger once roamed.
An image of the Caspian tiger. Not really good quality, but this will have to do when the tiger has been dead for over 50 years. Image is public domain.
The Caspian Tiger is a subspecies of the tiger (Panthera tigris), and is genetically very much like the Siberian tiger (Panthera tigris altaica), although a little bit smaller. These two subspecies share a lot of the same genetic material, and this makes the Siberian tiger a good match for reintroducing tigers into the Central Asia.
For this project, scientists from WWF and IUCN wants to release a total of 40 tigers into a mountain area in Kazakhstan, close to Lake Balkhash. This area has a climate that is pretty similar to the climate the Siberian tigers are used to, but with less snow. However, they will probably thrive in this area, and there are about 7,000 square kilometers of mostly pristine nature, so they have plenty of space to grow a new population. There is also very little human activity in the area, which was the problem for the Caspian tigers, but due to Kazakhstan having become an independent state, there is less agriculture in these areas.
Lake Balkhash as seen from space. This is where tigers will be reintroduced if everything goes according to plan. Image by NASA, posted as Public Domain.
The scientists hope these 40 tigers can in time turn into a population of 200 tigers, but this is a slow process. The best estimate on reaching this number is sometime within the next century, so this is a really long-term conservation project.
It will be interesting to follow this project in the future, and hopefully it will see action in a few years. Grand conservation ideas like these are really great in theory, but it is often more difficult to actually do it than to write about doing it, so we will see if it actually happens or not. Fingers crossed!
Sadly it is too late to do anything about the Caspian tiger, but introducing an almost similar subspecies into the same area is at least better than doing nothing. Hopefully this project will lead to a healthy tiger population in Kazakhstan in the future!
Sources
Here is a paper writing about the reintroduction of tigers in the Lake Balkhash area. This has also been much discussed and written about in the medias lately, so finding another source should also be pretty easy if you want more information.
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If only the Caspian tiger were still alive!!! Wow it would be so awesome. This great animal lived even close to Europe, where I (and you, the writer) live. Please people, be aware of your own role in the extinction of wildlife, still and especially today. Oil palm plantations thrive because we buy soaps, shampoo, lotions, cookies, chips and bread with palm oil in them. However, sustainable oil palm plantations do not exist; for every plantation, original rainforest was cut down to the ground and replaced by monocultures of oil palms where no animal wants to live. This is where beautiful wild animals like tigers used to roam... Nowadays many other species are the deceived ones. Please consider changing your own consumer-patterns!!! (And, even in organic shops, this means checking the contents of products, for many of them still contain palm oil and remember, sustainable palm oil does not actually exist...) Good luck humans!!! (and good luck Siberian tigers as well, of course)
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Thanks for sharing. I love this animal!
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Such beautiful animals, upsets me thinking people actually hunt these. :(
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Some here Karen hate it.
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Should be the hunters coming extinct
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Yea, it is very sad that these all got hunted down.
However, we have to remember that the 50s was a very different time from now. I can understand why some farmers hunted a few of them, or else they would not be able to keep animals on the farm, and not be able to provide food to their family. Soviet in 1950 was not really a great place to live, so I bet they had to do whatever it took to farm there. And I also don't think any of the farmers expected the results to be total extinction. They probably only killed a few tigers each, but in total it really added up.
I'm not trying to defend the hunters, just reminding everyone that times were really different in Central Asia back then, and I don't think they killed the tigers just to be evil :)
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I totally agree if we knew then what we knew now this would be different
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Yea, exactly! It is really good that science and information is so common knowledge now, so that most people are aware of the small numbers in a lot of animal populations. One would think this would stop people from hunting them, but sadly we still get a lot of hunters that kill endangered animals :(
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Money talks some people will do anything for it. So sad :(
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Thanks for mentioning this!
It would be partly good news at least if the Siberian tiger could replace the former Caspian tiger in this area. Maybe it would also help the Siberian tiger to survive which is endangered as well ...
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Yea, having the Siberian tiger at two different locations would be pretty good for their survival chance as well.
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I hope the tiger reintroduction works as well as the wolf reintroduction did in Yellowstone National Park in the US. If the hunting pressure is kept at bay, their populations might come back suprisingly fast. With the demand for tiger parts from the Asian markets, I wonder about that pressure being more of a problem than sharing space with agriculture. Good luck, tigers!
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Yea, we can hope it turns out to be as successful at Yellowstone :)
I also think illegal hunting might be a problem, so I hope this area gets protected prior to shipping in the tigers.
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