Featured Story

Sumatran Tiger Cubs Caught on Camera in Threatened Forest


WWF camera traps recorded an astounding 12 tigers in just two months in the central Sumatran landscape of Bukit Tigapuluh, including two mothers with cubs and three young tiger siblings playfully chasing a leaf.

Bukit Tigapuluh was identified as a global priority Tiger Conservation Landscape by leading scientists and is one of six landscapes the government of Indonesia pledged to protect at the November 2010 tiger summit. Unfortunately much of it faces the looming threat of being cleared by the pulp and paper industry which includes companies like Asia Pulp and Paper/Sinar Mas Group and Barito Pacific.

WWF is among the prominent scientists and conservation groups urging the two companies and the Indonesian government to protect these forests that are home to tigers.

It is estimated that only around 400 Sumatran tigers are left in the wild. The Sumatran tiger and the other five surviving tiger subspecies – the Amur, Malayan, Bengal, Indochinese and South China – number as few as 3,200, compared to 100,000 a century ago. WWF is working to build the political, financial and public support to double the number of tigers in the wild by 2022.

 

Learn more

Ways you can help protect tigers

Watch a video of a bulldozer clearing tiger habitat

Last Chance to Save Bukit Tigapuluh

  • Become a Paperless Member

    Become a monthly member and you'll receive more benefits online and less clutter offline.

    Join Now

  • Adopt a Tiger

    Make a symbolic tiger adoption to help save some of the world's most endangered animals from extinction and support WWF's conservation efforts.

    Adopt Now

Texting for Tigers

By texting TIGERS to 20222, your $10 donation will help WWF save the tiger in its vast range – from India to China, to the Russian Far East.

Learn more

Priority Landscapes for Saving Tigers


Based on the best available science, WWF has chosen 12 places to focus its resources for tigers.
View larger map

View more tiger maps

Send E-cards

Send a free tiger e-card with interesting facts about this species to your family and friends.

Send Now

WWF Experts

Dr. Sybille Klenzendorf

Managing Director
Species Conservation Program

"Young people are the future of conservation. We must inspire them and we must lead them by our example."

Read more

Tiger Video

Tiger Photo Gallery

Click the photo above to launch the tiger photo gallery

See Tigers with WWF

Travel with WWF to see tigers in the wild.

Learn more

Species of the Day

Loading...

Become a Paperless Member

Become a monthly member and you'll receive more benefits online and less clutter offline.

Join Now

Adopt a Tiger

Make a symbolic Tiger adoption to help save some of the world's most endangered animals from extinction and support WWF's conservation efforts.

Adopt now!

Support WWF

With the only credit card that supports WWF when you make a purchase, PLUS earn cash back.

Learn more

Bank of America will contribute $100 to WWF for each account opened & activated.