This Year of the Tiger, we need to raise AUD$510,000 to protect a quarter of the world’s remaining Sumatran tigers. There are approximately 70 tigers within the forest of West Sumatra who are in urgent need of a dedicated team to protect them from poaching, snares and poisoning. Your donation ...
But with your help, we are urgently launching a project to pay local people to replant and protect the rainforest!
It’s hard to imagine which would hurt more - the torn flesh, the fractured bone or the anguish of knowing you couldn’t reach your two young cubs; alone, hungry and unprotected.
The Sumatran tiger is in the fight of its life. Habitat loss, poaching, and human-tiger conflict are all pushing this iconic animal to the brink of Extinction. Yet the threats don’t stop.
COVID-19 has been a disaster for Critically Endangered species. Poaching is on the rise, deforestation is rampant, and illegal networks are thriving on profits they could only dream about a year ago.
Sumatra's rainforests are under threat from illegal activities like oil palm and rubber plantations. Vital habitat is being damaged and destroyed at an alarming rate. And it's pushing Critically Endangered wildlife like Sumatran tigers ever closer to Extinction.
Rimba is a female tiger who has been spotted near farmland and villages, on the edge of the Nagari Sontang forest in West Sumatra. On their first training session, our new Tiger Team found pugmarks (tiger paw prints) as well as claw marks on trees. This is evidence that Rimba ...
Littered with hidden snares, the Leuser Ecosystem in Sumatra is a minefield for wildlife like Sumatran tigers.
As Sumatra's forests disappear, so too do the animals tigers once hunted. In their desperate fight for survival, tigers are forced to prey on livestock. But farmers need their cattle for money and food. In their despair, farmers feel they have no choice but to kill these majestic beings to ...
The Wildlife Ambulance is one of the few teams providing urgent medical assistance to injured and displaced tigers in Sumatra. With fundraising down this year, they’re facing a shortfall - and we urgently need to raise $50,000 by the end of the year to keep this team on the ground
In June this year, our Sumatran Tiger Team uncovered something truly dreadful. Tiger bones, claws, teeth and whole skins. All waiting to be sold.