Thursday, April 7, 2011

The Overall Point of This Blog

I'm going to make this as simple as I can: Tigers are freaking awesome. They are endangered and it's all our fault. We need to do something to help them. Or else they may die. Get it now?

Monday, April 4, 2011

Something.

Recently, I wrote a paper for my English class on tigers and turns out neither one of my English related teachers even had the slightest idea that tigers were endangered! Then, I wrote a paper for my french class, she didn't know it either! Finally, I asked my school's zoologist (I attend a strange school) and she was the only one who knew.  I was shocked, I know I'm a freak (I'm a freak, no shit, but don't bother making fun of me for it because I'm just going to agree with you.) considering that I'm so obsessed with tigers but still, one would hope that people would be a little bit aware of this type of thing. It's sad, really sad.

Monday, March 21, 2011

This Is Amazing!

This would just be an awesome place to go sometime! I'd say it's going on my bucket list....

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Black and Yellow? In Your Dreams...

We've all heard the song Black and Yellow By Wiz Khalifa, and if you haven't, well, don't waste your time, it doesn't make much sense anyway. Anyhow, everyone knows the traditional tiger colors, black and orange. But have you ever seen a black and white tiger? They're pretty amazing. Instead of orangy-green eyes they have an icy blue. These tigers are the same as the orange and black ones, just a different color fur caused by a different gene. Amazing, right? Tigers remind me of people in a way, different color outsides but the exact same insides. There just different, in a beautiful way. Tigers don't judge each other by their fur color, if only humans would do the same...

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Just More Proof Of How Beautiful and Rare These Creatures Are

My cousin sent me this picture over Skype because she knows how much I love tigers. I read this article and I found it intrigueing. This woman went all the way to South India just to catch a glimpse of these beautiful animals.
Are South Indian Tigers Going Extinct?
Please read this.

Tiger Trade Facts And Falicies- Sort of Boreing But it Tells The Rules And Punishments of Hunting Tigers

ASSUMPTION: Legalizing domestic tiger trade is the sovereign right of any nation. 
FACTS: CITES Resolution Conf. 12.5 asks Parties to prohibit trade in tiger parts and derivatives, both internationally and domestically, even from captive-bred specimens. This resolution was adopted by consensus.
 Range countries with wild tiger populations stand to lose the most from any unilateral decision to legalize any form of tiger trade.
 Any country that legalizes tiger trade at this time will bear significant responsibility for loss of wild tigers due to poaching.
ASSUMPTION: Bans on tiger trade have not worked, so it is time to try a new approach. FACTS:
 The current international and domestic bans on trade in tiger products have helped Russia’s tiger population to recover and other wild tiger populations to persist.
 Without these bans, wild tigers would be even worse off than they are today.  Experience has shown that bans on trade in other highly endangered species have been very effective −
when they are adequately supported and enforced.
ASSUMPTION: Traditional tiger conservation methods have not worked, as evidenced by the continuing decline of wild tiger populations. 
FACTS: Few tiger range countries have invested the full political will and financial support necessary for traditional tiger conservation methods to work.
 Protection of habitat and prey species coupled with anti-poaching efforts stabilized wild tiger populations in the Russian Far East and in certain reserves in India and elsewhere.
 Wild tigers are far more likely to survive and thrive if they are well protected in situ.  Traditional conservation methods are far less costly per tiger protected than any ex situ scenario, and also
protect entire species complexes and ecosystems.
ASSUMPTION: Tiger farming will supply all demand for tiger products at an affordable price. 
FACTS: Raising a farmed tiger to maturity is 250 times as expensive as poaching a wild tiger in India. Therefore, tigers poached from the wild will provide a cheaper alternative to supplement legal sources.
 A regulatory regime would drive up the costs of farmed products, making the lower costs of poached tigers even more attractive.
 There is no evidence that tiger farming will do anything to curb the economic incentive to poach tigers.  There is insufficient information on potential demand for tiger products if bans were lifted.
ASSUMPTION: Legal trade in farmed tiger products would decrease demand for parts of wild tigers. 
FACTS: There is no evidence to support such a claim.  Legalizing trade would ignite demand from former consumers and recruit new consumers, thereby
increasing demand.  The bones of wild tigers are believed by some consumers to have more powerful health effects, making
them more desirable and more valuable than farmed products.  Given the impossibility of distinguishing wild tiger products from farmed tiger products, stopping illegal
trade in parts from wild tigers would be made far more difficult.
ASSUMPTION: Legalizing trade in farmed tiger products will decrease poaching of wild tigers. FACTS:
 There is no evidence to support such a claim.  Poaching, smuggling and illicit trade are often run by organized criminal networks with large profit
margins, and legalizing trade in products from farmed tigers is likely to create rather than end black
market opportunities.  Tiger poaching will always be less expensive than tiger farming and, therefore, more lucrative.  Illegal tiger products cannot be distinguished from legal tiger products.  If trade in farmed tigers is legalized, poaching of wild tigers will increase, and scientific studies in India
have demonstrated that most wild tiger populations will not be able to withstand even small increases in
poaching over time.  To decrease poaching of wild tigers, trade bans must be kept in place and better implemented with
professional law enforcement efforts all along the trade chain, from forest to end-use market.
ASSUMPTION: Farmed tigers will one day be placed into the wild, ensuring survival of wild tigers. 
FACTS: Wild tigers can be saved more easily and at far less expense by protecting the habitat and prey of existing wild tiger populations.
 Most tigers on farms do not have the genetic pedigree for release into the wild.  Tigers in farms are bred to be docile with other tigers, making it likely that resident wild tigers, which are
territorial, would kill any farmed tigers introduced into the wild.  To date, reintroductions of lions and other carnivores have failed and resulted in loss of human lives,
livestock and the wildlife involved.  Due to their lack of fear of humans, captive-bred tigers would be easily poached.  A lack of fear of humans will make any farm-raised tigers released into the wild a menace to people.  Given good management, there are enough tigers left in the wild to ensure recovery of wild tigers. Indeed,
they will “breed like cats” with adequate protection of habitat and prey, coupled with enforcement of existing laws.
ASSUMPTION: Tiger products are needed for human health and to preserve certain cultural practices. 
FACTS: Leading members of the global traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) industry say they do not need or want tiger products and that reopening trade in such products will damage the reputation of TCM. It is important to respect these wishes and views, particularly the efforts of TCM practitioners to use alternatives to tiger bone.
 Leaders of ethnic communities that have used tiger skins to adorn traditional dress are now encouraging their people to stop wearing the fur of tigers and other endangered species.
ASSUMPTION: Legalizing trade products from tiger farms will enhance local livelihoods. FACTS:
 The livelihoods that will be enhanced by legalizing trade in farmed tiger products are likely to be already- wealthy tiger farm owners and medicine manufacturers, or the criminal networks that will insert the parts of wild tigers into the market.
 It is indeed important to work to enhance the livelihoods of the rural poor, but legalization of trade in tiger products will not achieve this. In India, the potential for many local poor people living near tiger reserves to base their livelihoods on revenue from tourist revenue and handicrafts is significant. Therefore, reopening of tiger bone trade in China could harm the rural poor of India.
 Smuggling of tiger parts and derivatives is a symptom of a lack of effective enforcement to stop transnational crime, which has negative social and economic implications. By commitments to cross-border enforcement efforts, governments will move a long way towards combating not just illegal wildlife trade, but other forms of serious crime as well.
This document was prepared in collaboration with the American College of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Conservation International, Environmental Investigation Agency, Humane Society International, International Fund for Animal Welfare, Save The Tiger Fund, TRAFFIC International, Wildlife Conservation Society, Wildlife Trust of India , Wildlife Protection Society of India, World Society for the Protection of Animals and WWF.