JonnyS18
Well-Known Member
Jurek,
My point exactly.
Who pays the ferrymen for 50,000 tigers to exist in Asia, the judge ....?
(do not make me laugh)This is populism at its worst catering to the masses to pacify short term palatable objectives. It is a sham in the Year of Biodiversity as this verdict fails to underpin why tigers are losing wild spaces in the first place (and now captive spaces for pure real conservation value tigers in zoo environments too) ....!!!
K.B.
Sorry mate i don't know if i'm thick or if you're speaking in old english here, but i barely understood a word of that. If the reply was aimed at me i'll try & reply as best i can. The point i was making which i think you're replying to, was that if it were not for humans tigers would have more than likely being the dominant species of our planet, a predator being second in size only to the polar bear & far more adaptable. So it's not ridiculous to assume as they spread throughout the rest of the East that sub species may have overlapped & maybe even created new sub species. How do you think we got 5 (or is it 6 now) separated sub species in the first place?
To be quite honest i'd happily rather see hybrid tigers thriving than no tigers at all. & lets face it, that outcome is becoming a real possibility every year as this species moves closer to extinction.
I agree with you a hundred percent that it is ridiculous in the year of the tiger to be so close to losing them. But to be fair, i think zoo's should concentrate more on releasing the pure stock they have now instead of wasting time panicking over 30 or so tigers who aren't a hundred percent pure. How much money has been wasted shipping them backwards & forwards to prevent cross breeding? Money that could have gone into wild tiger conservation. Preferably when zoo's do begin to return their pure tigers to the wild, the only tigers we'll have in captivity will & SHOULD be hybrids. Sorry again if i've mis-interpreted what you were saying, it is probably me just being thick.