Photos of rare Amur tiger give hope to NE China's tiger recovery efforts

Photos of a rare Amur tiger, caught on film for the first time in Wangqing Nature Reserve in northeast China鈥檚 Changbai mountains, are giving hope to tiger recovery efforts in the region.
A camera trap set up in the reserve captured two photos of the tiger in April. These photos provide evidence of the extension of the Amur tiger鈥檚 range from Hunchun, located close to the Russian border, into the inner Changbai mountain area, part of the Amur-Heilong Tiger Landscape that straddles China and Russia.
Amur tigers migrating to the inner Changbaishan area must pass through Wangqing, located next to the Hunchun Nature Reserve. As recommended by WWF-China, the Jilin Forestry Department has accorded Hunchun-Wangqing the highest priority protection area in The Project Plan of the Recovery of Amur Tiger and Tiger Habitat in Changbaishan Area in Jilin.
Although footprints of the Amur tiger have been discovered many times in Wangqing since 2008, this is the first time that a camera trap set up in the reserve has captured photos of the rare species. Experts will try to identify the individual tiger photographed by comparing it with photos of Amur tigers taken previously in Hunchun.
鈥淭he photos give hope on the real possibility that tigers could return to their previous habitat if steps are taken to manage it,鈥漵aid Dr. Zhu Jiang, Head of WWF-China鈥檚 Northeast Programme Office . 鈥淚n recent years, we have had camera traps taking photos of Amur tiger and also Amur leopard in Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces. It shows that the camera trap is a very effective tool in monitoring rare wildlife species. We have to expand its use so as to build an effective monitoring platform.鈥
At present, the Jilin and Heilongjiang forestry departments, International Feline Research Centre of China鈥檚 State Forestry Administration and WWF are working together to set up automatic infrared cameras to build the monitoring platform to cover core potential Amur tiger habitats in the Changbai and Wanda mountains in Jilin and Heilongjiang Provinces respectively.
鈥淒ata collected through this technology will help greatly in monitoring the Amur tiger population and its distribution,鈥 said Mr. Jiang Jinsong, Jilin Forestry Department鈥檚 Tiger and Leopard Programme Officer. 鈥淚t would also help us determine whether there are settled individuals or breeding families, and therefore support conservation measures.鈥
Amur tigers were once widespread in northeast China. Habitat degradation and fragmentation, poaching and a small prey base have led the wild population to decline. Estimates put the current wild Amur tiger population in Northeast China, mostly confined to the Changbai Mountains in Jilin Province and Wanda mountains in Heilongjian Province, at between 18-24 individuals. The adjacent forested habitat of the Russian Far East holds more, between 430-500 tigers.
Provided by WWF