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The Indo-Chinese tiger is also called Corbett’s tiger after the former tiger hunter turned naturalist Jim Corbett. Access to the areas where Indo-Chinese tigers live in the wild has long been restricted, and as a consequence accurate studies of these tigers and their numbers, by field biologists, have been limited. Therefore there is a very limited knowledge of the status of these tigers in the wild. It has been reported that, in Vietnam, almost 75% of the tigers killed provide stock for traditional Chinese medicines. The greatest density of Indo-Chinese tigers is found in Thailand where around 100 individuals survive, other wild populations are restricted to 30 or fewer tigers in each group.
| Category | Details |
| Scientific Name | Panthera tigris corbetti |
| Habitat | Remote forests in hilly and mountainous terrain; major corridors exist along Himalayan mountain borders. |
| Location | Dispersed through Thailand, China, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Vietnam, and Bhutan. |
| IUCN Listing | Endangered |
| Population | 1,200–1,800 total estimated; only approximately 300 remain in the wild. |
| Size | Smaller/darker than Bengal tigers; 110–190kg (males are ~50% heavier than females). |
| Major Threats | Poaching, prey depletion (deer/boar), habitat fragmentation, and in-breeding. |
Royal Bengal tigers are the most numerous sub-species in the wild with the highest density in India (around 2967 individuals at July 2019).
Rigorous anti-poaching methods in combination with other conservation efforts in Russia have brought the Amur tiger back from the brink of extinction.
Smaller and darker than the Royal Bengal tiger, Sumatran Tigers can weigh between 75-150kg, with the males weighing around 30% more than the females
There is little known about the biology of Malayan tigers. They were only identified as a separate sub-species from the Indo-Chinese tiger sub-species in 2004.
It is believed to be functionally extinct in the wild, and if non-captive populations still exist they are most likely to be found in the provincial borders in Southeast China.
Your donation, no matter the size, can make a real difference, helping to save lives, protect cubs and preserve a world where tigers still roam free. Please give today and be a part of the fight to keep wild tigers wild.
Volunteers do not necessarily have the time. They just have the heart. The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others.
Our ultimate goal is to prevent the extinction of wild tigers. It is vital that we eliminate wild tiger deaths due to poaching and retaliatory poisoning to ensure that wild tigers are around for future generations.