Nepal Announced that the number of Tigers has nearly Tripled

The year 2024 is a special one as it marks the second year since Nepal announced that the number of tigers in the country has nearly tripled.

 

Back in 2010, there were only 121 tigers in Nepal. Now, the latest figure stands at 355. This achievement is the result of over a decade of efforts and is part of a global campaign to save tigers.

13 countries, including Nepal, reached an agreement and set a goal: to double the number of tigers by 2022. Nepals achievements not only met the targets but also far exceeded expectations.

Deep in the forests of Nepal lives the Bengal tiger, one of the five remaining tiger subspecies in the world and the only tiger species in Nepal.

The Terai Plains of Nepal are home to tigers and also the place where the relationship between tigers and humans is the most tense. It is said that over 100,000 tigers lived on this land in Nepal a hundred years ago. However, with the large-scale migration of humans, land reclamation and agricultural development in the middle of the 20th century, the tigers habitats were severely damaged and their numbers dropped sharply.

To protect tigers, Nepal has taken a variety of innovative measures. By 2013, the number of tiger had grown to 198, and a survey in 2018 showed that it had risen to 235.

Original Chinese Link:https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/5SoUCAi1Y6IrNc5oBd-oMg

Edited by: YJ
Reviewed By: Maggie
Contact: v10@cbcgdf.org; +8617319454776

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