• Snaring of Big Cats in Mainland Asia Brochure

    Snaring of Big Cats in Mainland Asia (, )

    November 18, 2022

    A new briefing from WWF and TRAFFIC finds distressing evidence of documented snaring cases involving a minimum of 387 big cats (tigers, leopards, snow leopards, and Asiatic lions) across seven Asian countries between 2012-2021, with a majority of cases documented outside protected areas.

    more info
  • Living with Tigers: How to manage coexistence for the benefit of people and tigers Brochure

    Living with Tigers: How to manage coexistence for the benefit of people and tigers (, )

    June 13, 2022

    The Living with Tigers report is in many respects a direct response to a considerable conservation success story, which is that wild tiger populations are on the rise following a 2010 agreement by tiger range countries and their partners to double the global population of the species by 2022. This recovery has been highly uneven though, with South Asia accounting for the vast majority of this increase.

    more info
  • Skin and Bones Unresolved: An analysis of tiger seizures from 2000-2018 Brochure

    Skin and Bones Unresolved: An analysis of tiger seizures from 2000-2018 (application/pdf, 4.38 MB)

    August 27, 2019

    Poaching and the illegal trade of tiger parts are continuing to threaten wild tiger populations. TRAFFIC’s latest report on the illegal trade in tiger parts analyzes data over a 19 year period from 2000 to 2018, providing details and statistics on trends and the urgent threats facing wild tigers.

    more info
  • Don't Flush Tiger Forests Brochure

    Don't Flush Tiger Forests (application/pdf, 9.58 MB)

    February 08, 2012

    The lush rain forests on the Indonesian island of Sumatra suffer from what may be the world’s fastest deforestation rate, threatening the survival of species and causing massive carbon emissions. WWF found that two brands sold in the United States—Paseo and Livi—are made with paper from Asia Pulp & Paper (APP), which is responsible for more forest destruction in Sumatra than any other single company.

    more info