Showing posts with label Tigers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tigers. Show all posts

Friday, February 10, 2012

Tiger on the Menu

Photo by: http://www.flickr.com/photos/larskjensen/2752917025/


Tiger on the Menu

Thai police recently raided a house in Bangkok and "seizure of tiger skins and carcasses and other protected wildlife from a major smuggler at a Bangkok home".

Sounds reasonable enough...they caught him. Note the use of the words 'Skins' and 'major smuggler'.

The report goes on to state: "An official from the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation (DNP) said the skinned tigers could have been obtained from one of the zoos. So, the inspection, when done, would reveal a head-count and other details of animals at all premises and likely evidence of any that had gone missing."

That is good news. It is years ago now that all zoos in Thailand were required to have their tigers microchipped. This was done specifically because of the illegal export of tigers from the infamous Sri Racha Tiger Zoo and should have prevented, but didn't Tigers going out of the back door of the cruel and exploitative Tiger Temple.

Not just Tigers here as the report also states "Tiger skins and carcasses along with meat from elephants, zebras and lions were found at the house". Bit worrying because there have been recent reports of elephants being killed for their meat in Thailand.

You can read this full story here: http://news.asiaone.com/News/AsiaOne%2BNews/Asia/Story/A1Story20120207-326300.html

The next report is headed: "Police suspect illegal tiger meat haul came from zoo"

It mentions "400kg of tiger meat" which suggests there was more than one animal here and goes on to state "the alleged tiger meat owner, Tananuwat Boonperm, alias Od Bang Kroui, kept records relating to the illegal wildlife trade."

and goes on to implicate with "The tiger zoo in Si Racha was linked to a previous case when 11 tiger carcasses were found in Nakhon Phanom in 2008.

People caught with the tiger meat at the time claimed it came from the Si Racha zoo. Investigators, however, could not prosecute the farm due to insufficient evidence, he said."

Are the investigators truly blind and ignorant to what is going on in Sri Racha Tiger Zoo? To me it is obvious. Somebody needs to pull their finger out.

Further to the above:
"The officer said the tiger population at the zoo was growing rapidly and the daily food bill was 2,000 baht."

2,000 baht!!!!!!! There was more than 400 tigers there on my last visit and they are churning cubs out because they need them for photography sessions. 2,000 baht is a good night out in Thailand!

I have asked the question before. Where are all these tigers going? I know. To make things worse Sri Racha is not alone. There are loads of other places producing tigers. These animals will easily live 20 years. There is not the space to house them all.

Read more on the above at: http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/local/278582/police-suspect-illegal-tiger-meat-haul-came-from-zoo

Tiger Producers include:

Sri Racha Tiger Zoo

The Tiger Temple

Million Years Stone Park

Samutprakarn Crocodile Farm

Tiger Kingdom in Chiang Mai


There is a whole big mess needs sorting out here. Heads need to roll.




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Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Grrreat News For Tigers and Tiger Conservation



DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

Fish and Wildlife Service

50 CFR Part 17

[Docket No. FWS–R9–IA–2011–0027; 96300–1671–0000–R4]RIN 1018–AW81

Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; U.S. Captive-Bred Inter-Subspecific Crossed or Generic Tigers

AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service,Interior.

ACTION: Proposed rule.

SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), propose to amend the regulations that implement the Endangered Species Act (Act) by removing inter-subspecific crossed or generic tiger (Panthera tigris) (i.e., specimens not identified or identifiable as members of Bengal, Sumatran, Siberian, or Indochinese subspecies from the list of species that are exempt from registration under the Captive-bred Wildlife (CBW) regulations. The exemption currently allows those individuals or breeding operations who want to conduct otherwise prohibited activities, such as take, interstate commerce, and export, under the Act with U.S. captive-bred, live intersubspecific crossed or generic tigers to do so without becoming registered. We are proposing this change to the regulations to strengthen control over captive breeding of tigers in the United States to ensure that such breeding supports the conservation of the species in the wild consistent with the purposes of the Act. The inter-subspecific crossed or generic tigers remain listed as endangered under the Act, and a person would need to obtain authorization under the current statutory and regulatory requirements to conduct any otherwise prohibited activities with them.

Go to the original document for full details:
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 162 / Monday, August 22, 2011 / Proposed Rules


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Monday, June 20, 2011

Edinburgh Based Wildlife Forensic Experts Train International Scientists in Tiger CSI Techniques
















Edinburgh Based Wildlife Forensic Experts Train International Scientists in Tiger CSI Techniques

A three year wildlife forensics project has seen international scientists come to Edinburgh for three weeks of intensive training.

Four scientists from Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia are currently working and learning with Dr Rob Ogden and Dr Ross McEwing at the WildGenes Laboratory of the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland, based at Edinburgh Zoo. The visiting scientists are part of a co-ordinated network, called the ASEAN * Wildlife Forensics Network, which links wildlife forensic specialists across South-East Asia and seeks to introduce and advance DNA testing as a significant weapon in the fight against animal trafficking.

Funded by the Darwin Initiative**, which aims to support conservation in countries that are financial poor but rich in biodiversity, the project is managed by TRACE Wildlife Forensics Network and partnered by the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS).

Increasingly traded for meat as well as Traditional Medicines, tracking the illegal trade in tigers is a high priority. Using parallel techniques to human DNA profiling, the international project is developing a profiling system that can identify individual tigers in South East Asia. This will mean that when meat, parts and even whole tiger seizures are made across South East Asia, experts can identify where they have come from – either zoos selling illegally or wild animals being poached – with the aim of stopping and prosecuting those involved.

Please visit http://www.asean-wfn.org/  for further information.


Photo courteousy Edinburgh Zoo


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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Poor tiger criminals


In November an interesting case was put forward involving two dead tigers in a freezer at a tiger farm in Thanh Hoa province. The owner of the farm is the same “farmer” that
has been linked to several major seizures of frozen tigers in Hanoi in recent years, and is also the same man who has been arrested once before trying to smuggle wildlife from Tanzania. It should be further noted that this farmer obtained all of his original tigers illegally from the trade in direct violation of the law.

However, the Thanh Hoa tiger farmer appears to have gained the sympathy of provincial authorities according to interviews in the press. Rather than simply applying the law, authorities reportedly ponder whether the “poor farmer” should be compensated for his dead tigers.

Are we expected to feel sorry for the rich illegal tiger farmer (businessman) for the expenses he has incurred raising tigers that he should not have in the first place? Would not selling tigers or their parts violate the ban on the commercial trade of fully protected species like tigers?

In fact, such a sale would violate the law and would undermine Vietnam's international commitment to protect tigers, reinforced during the November tiger summit in St. Petersburg, where range state leaders and senior government officials met and reaffirmed their commitment to protecting the world's last tigers.

ENV joins most of the Vietnamese law enforcement community in strictly opposing the sale of tigers, their parts and products, whether confiscated from trade or originating at farms. Opening the door to commercial trade of tigers and their products will undermine law enforcement efforts, and permit people like the Thanh Hoa tiger farmer to generate income from both his captive tigers and those potentially smuggled through his farm into the trade.

Back in 2007, two dead tigers discovered at this same Thanh Hoa farm were publicly incinerated following a decision by provincial authorities. The incineration of the remains of these tigers eliminated any possibility of the farmer profiting from the death of his tigers.

More recently in Nghe An, provincial authorities demonstrated leadership in efforts to stop illegal tiger trade in a case involving the confiscation of one frozen tiger, tiger


To read the rest of this report from the "Education for Nature - Vietnam" along with other interesting articles please click HERE

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'No Mirrors Involved'
Snow Leopards
Photo supplied by Peter Litherland of the


 

Thursday, April 1, 2010

If Tiger Farms Were To Close

If Tiger Farms Were To Close




There are around 6000 Tigers held in captivity in China today. It is estimated that around 5000 of these are held in what are termed ‘Tiger Farms’. This number may well be an underestimate.


These Chinese Tigers are often referred to as ‘rare’ Siberian or Amur Tigers by the press. In essence this is true because the Siberian Tiger Panthera tigris altaica is rare, rare in the wild. There may only be as few as 30 wild animals remaining in China. The other Chinese Tiger sub-species is the South China Tiger Panthera tigris amoyensis which may already be extinct outside of zoos.

The Tiger Farm Tigers are not rare because they are no longer of the Siberian or South Chinese sub-species. They are generic Tigers. Hybrids. Generic Tigers are animals which have been cross bred across sub-species and where sub-species have been bred brother to sister, mother to son over generations. Such animals are virtually useless from the point of view of conservation. Once a Tiger has been hybridised then it and all its progeny, forever will be hybrids.


ISIS (International Species Information System) has three studbooks for the Amur Tiger. One for the species, one for the group and one for hybrids. Whereas these list a total of some 500 animals worldwide, not a single specimen is listed for China. Note though that 500 is really a drop in the ocean because this is only a listing of the responsible holders who actively participate in official breeding management programmes. Any zoo which holds Siberian/Amur tigers and claims to be involved in conservation and is not ISIS listed is not telling the truth.

The US Fish and Wildlife Service sensibly stated:

Generic or crossed tigers cannot be used for enhancement of propagation of the species, however they can be used in a manner that should enhance survival of the species in the wild. Examples include exhibition in a manner designed to educate the public about the ecological role and conservation needs of the species and satisfaction of demand for tigers so that wild specimens or captive purebred subspecies are not used.”



The only problem with this approach is that the holders of these generic tigers continue to breed them. There is a real and genuine need for more spaces in captivity to hold known specimens of the various sub-species. Perhaps not breeding animals, but there just in case they are needed. A‘not keeping all your eggs in one basket’ approach. Taking up the room in captivity with generic tigers is harming the chances of managed populations of Tigers surviving.

Furthermore the IUCN Guidelines for Re-introductions states:

It is desirable that source animals come from wild populations. If there is a choice of wild populations to supply founder stock for translocation, the source population should ideally be closely related genetically to the original native stock and show similar ecological characteristics (morphology, physiology, behaviour, habitat preference) to the original sub-population.”

And

If captive or artificially propagated stock is to be used, it must be from a population which has been soundly managed both demographically and genetically, according to the principles of contemporary conservation biology.”

And furthermore

The World Zoo Conservation Strategy says:


Demographic stability is needed to ensure that an adequate number of animals of breeding age are available to reproduce at the rates needed to increase or maintain the population at its desired size. Healthy populations are needed to ensure that animals are capable of breeding when needed. Genetic diversity is required for populations to remain healthy and adapt to changing environments (i.e. experience natural selection). Ex situ breeding programmes need to preserve this diversity, otherwise the long-term fitness of these populations will be compromised.”

To which they add

A primary goal of cooperative ex situ breeding programmes for threatened and endangered species is to support in situ conservation. This may be through rescue of species imminently threatened with extinction in the wild, through research, education, or promotion efforts that support in situ populations, or simply as genetic and demographic reservoirs serving as backups for endangered wild populations.”

This would clearly not be the case with any of the Chinese Tiger Farm animals.

It also applies to White Tigers, which are also very common in Chinese Zoos and often promoted as something different and special. White Tigers only exist in captivity because of continual deliberate and harmful inbreeding. Today there is probably not a single captive White Tiger anywhere in the world that could be considered as genetically important. Undeniably beautiful the breeding has resulted in numerous genetic defects which are not immediately obvious. Evidence enough though to stop breeding and maintenance for purely commercial gain.



Generic Tigers are a major problem wherever they are located be it the US, Australasia, Europe or China. Generic Tigers are unregulated. Breeding and disposal are at the whim of the holder. In some locations a reporting structure may be present and in others not. This leaves the Tigers open to abuse. No-one knows how many are born, how many died. No-one knows either what happened to the bodies after death. It is barely a hop and skip to disappearing into the black market of illegal animal products.


If the Tiger Farms of China were told to cease operation there would be a major problem. There is no question about releasing them into the wild. The population in the wild is already in trouble. Adding more tigers to it would only increase the problems for the Tigers that are already there.

So where could these 5 or 6 thousand tigers go? A small number, perhaps a hundred or so which could be shown to be pure and with a proven lineage may perhaps be taken into the official breeding programme, but the rest?

It is unlikely that a few thousand newspaper readers are going to dip their hands in their pockets to rescue 6,000 tigers as was done recently for a dozen Lions from Romania. Although most people are wholly against Tiger farming, and rightfully so, there would be a huge howl of protest at the suggestion that these Tigers should be euthanized.

The idea that all breeding should cease in the Tiger Farms and that the animals should live out their natural lives sounds reasonable but just who is going to foot the bill? Even if each one were to live just ten years it is a long time to maintain something which is to all intents and purposes, useless. Maintaining five thousand is just not a serious option. So what happens next?

First published on Newsvine

Monday, February 1, 2010

Tiger Farms



Tigers and other farmyard animals

For every one wild tiger alive in the world today, there may be three "farmed" tigers in China.




They have been bred for their hides but also their bones, which are used to infuse some wines prized in South East Asia.



Some in the region believe that the consumption of certain parts of a tiger's carcass can give strength and virility.



China banned the trade in tiger bones and products in 1993 but that has not stopped the practice, which is currently on the agenda of an international tiger conservation conference in Thailand.


According to the World Bank, which leads the Global Tiger Initiative (GTI), the trade is being spurred by privately run tiger farms in Asian countries. It has called for these farms to be shut down.




Tigers on the farms are kept in cages and are also allowed to chase cows or chickens for the amusement of the paying public.



"Our position is that tiger farms as an animal practice are cruel," said the World Bank's Keshav Varma, GTI's programme director, as he attended the conference in Hua Hin.



"They fan the potential use of tiger parts," he told the Associated Press news agency.



In order to get an idea of what goes on in these farms, which are often presented as parks for tourists, BBC World Service spoke to Judy Mills of Conservation International, who has visited some of them.



'Speed-breeding'



The world's entire surviving wild tiger population is somewhere between 3,600 and 3,200, conservationists believe.



In China, there are now close to 10,000 tigers on farms, says Ms Mills, while other estimates suggest the number may be around 5,000.



"These are speed-breeding factory farms," Conservation International's tiger specialist says.



According to her research, farm tigresses produce cubs at about three times or more their natural rate, bearing up to three litters a year. Cubs are often taken away from their mothers before they are properly weaned.



These cubs, she says, are usually made to suckle from other animals, such as pigs or dogs - their "wet nurse surrogates" - so that the tigresses can produce more young.



"The part [of the farm] which people rarely see is basically a winery in which the skeletons of grown tigers are cleaned and put into vats of wine," says Ms Mills.



The bones are steeped for years, she explains, and the length of the infusion determines the value of the wine.



Conservation International says it is very difficult to clarify the legal status of these farms in China.



"When I first visited a tiger farm in 1990, it was part of a fur farm raising racoon, dogs, mink and other fur-bearing animals for commercial use," says Ms Mills. "The owner of the farm was showing me the log of orders for tiger bones and skins and other parts and products from tigers.



"Then in 1993, because of international pressure, China banned its commercial trade in tiger bone and tiger bone products but, at the same time, these

For Full Story
 
Read more about Tiger Farming

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Panic in Zoo as Tigers Escape


Two tigers escape from Guwahati zoo, tranquilised later

Two adult tigers Saturday escaped from an enclosure at the Assam State Zoo in Guwahati, triggering panic among nearly 10,000 visitors who were inside the zoo at that time, wildlife officials said.


Guwahati, Jan 30 (IANS) Two adult tigers Saturday escaped from an enclosure at the Assam State Zoo in Guwahati, triggering panic among nearly 10,000 visitors who were inside the zoo at that time, wildlife officials said.

A zoo spokesperson said the two big cats managed to sneak out of their iron enclosure when three animal keepers were disinfecting it by opening one of the cage doors.

'The two tigers came out of the enclosure and started walking lazily in the open leading to great amount of panic and fear,' zoo warden Narayan Mahanta told IANS.

The zoo, the only one in Assam, was teeming with people with an estimated 10,000 visitors inside the premises when the two tigers walked out of the enclosure.

'We immediately evacuated the visitors and tried to locate the cats before tranquilising one of them relaxing by the side of a pool inside the zoo,' Mahanta said.

A large contingent of police and wildlife officials rushed to the zoo and managed to tranquilise the other tiger around noon.

'The entire operation took us about three hours before both the cats were tranquilised and taken to safety. They are now under observation by a team of veterinarians,' the zoo warden said.

No one was injured with the tigers slowly walking around the zoo even as thousands of visitors simply ran for their lives seeing the cats on the prowl.

'We were terrified to see the two big tigers majestically walking past and simply ran for life,' a visibly shocked Arun Das, a college student, said.

'I saw the tigers from say a distance of about 20 feet from me.'

Zoo authorities have since ordered a probe to find out how the tigers managed to get out of the enclosure that also houses seven other big cats.

'We have already begun a high level enquiry into the incident, although I must say all the animal keepers engaged in the zoo are dedicated and experienced,' Mahanta said.

In 2007, a 50-year-old man was mauled to death by a tiger in the same zoo when he scaled a barricade and went close to the enclosure to click photographs of the cats, while another visitor in 2008 was seriously injured by a Himalayan black bear after he jumped into the animal's enclosure

Read Full Story

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

China Scraps Plans To Legalise Trade in Tigers




China backs down from plan to legalise tiger trade


China has shelved plans to legalise trade in tiger parts and will instead increase its protection of wild tigers in a bid to save them from extinction.
 
The sale of bones, skins and other body parts was banned in China in 1993 in order to protect the country's declining tiger population. There are currently only between 18 and 24 wild tigers in China, down from over 4,000 in the 1950s.



However, officials from the State Forestry Administration (SFA) were on the verge of scrapping the ban last year, following pressure from China's tiger farms, who are keen to sell their stockpiles of farmed tiger parts.

 Practitioners of Chinese medicine have traditionally ground tiger bones into a health tonic, while the penis is used to increase virility and the whiskers are said to cure toothache.




Chinese tiger farmers argued that the ban should be lifted because it was having no discernible effect in increasing the wild tiger population. However, the SFA has now said it will maintain the ban and increase policing.



A new directive promises to link local forestry bureaus with other law enforcement officials to prevent poaching, and will order the destruction of any tiger part stockpiles

Read Full Story

Friday, January 22, 2010

The Indonesian Tiger Dumping Plan Stinks

I would not describe myself as a 'green' but true enough the Indonesian Tiger Plan appears not to be very well thought out as I remarked yesterday.

I cannot see how renting out a tiger can possibly curb illegal trade and hunting. I have thought long and hard on this. How?

Renting tigers out as status symbols to the wealthy is no assurance of welfare.

Three monthly visits by 'experts' means little if today they are unable to properly monitor the way tigers and other species are kept in some Indonesian zoos.

Size of enclosure does not matter so much as management, hygiene and quality of space.

Being wealthy does not bestow brains so there really is no assurance of 'good food'.

So they are going to be allowed to breed? Animals can be handed back when the novelty wears off? This puts me in mind of "a dog is for life not just for Christmas." Animals are not cars or clothes. They need 100% commitment. If one of these people is prepared to become another John Aspinall then fair enough I approve but it does not sound like it. It smacks of a get rich quick scheme with little thought behind it. They want to start the scheme 'as soon as possible'. Why? Why? Is there some zoo somewhere which is desperate to unload tigers? Which zoo? Why are they holding so many? Have they not heard of breeding management? Are they getting a cut of the cash? Or have they run out of pokey lttle slum zoos on which to dump surplus? - Peter







Indonesia's tiger adoption plan angers greens

An Indonesian government proposal offering rare Sumatran tigers up for adoption by wealthy citizens has drawn scorn from environmental activists, who say it's the wrong approach to conservation.




There are only 400 Sumatran tigers left in Indonesia, where deforestation has destroyed much of their native habitat and they are hunted for traditional medicines and illegal menageries.



Tiger "adoption" -- where a pair can be rented out as pets in exchange for a 1 billion rupiah ($107,100) deposit -- could help curb illegal hunting and trade, a Forestry Ministry official said on Friday.



"There are many orders from rich people who want them, who feel if they own a tiger they are a big shot. We have to take concrete steps to protect these animals," said Darori, the ministry's Director General of Forest Protection and Nature Conservation.



The tiger "renters" must allow visits at three-monthly intervals by a team of vets, animal welfare officers and ministerial staff.



The animals will come from those already kept in captivity, and must be given cages with minimum dimensions of five metres high, six metres wide and 10 metres (16 feet by 19 feet by 32 feet).



"That's almost as big as my house," said Darori. "And because these people are rich, they will definitely give them good food."



The tigers will remain state property and will be returned to the state if they are no longer wanted, he said. Any cubs the tigers produce will be the property of the state.



Darori said he had received complaints about the plan from 12 environmental NGOs.

"So we have invited them for consultation before we continue with this plan. If we can agree, it will be put into practice as soon as possible," he said.



Greenpeace's forest campaigner, Bustar Maitar, said the plan was tantamount to selling

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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Rare does NOT necessarily mean important or endangered

World's Rarest and Most Unusual Tigers

The tiger is one of the most popular animals in the world.. It is the largest cat and is endemic to Asia. Tigers can attain four meters or 13 ft in total length and can weigh up to 384 kilograms or 847 pounds.







The tiger is one of the most popular animals in the world.. It is the largest cat and is endemic to Asia. Tigers can attain four meters or 13 ft in total length and can weigh up to 384 kilograms or 847 pounds.





The unique Maltese Tiger is the rarest tiger in the world. It is also known as Blue Tiger and had been reported mostly from the Fujian Province of China. It is said to have bluish fur with dark grey stripes. The term Maltese comes from domestic cat terminology for blue fur and refers to the slate grey coloration.


Read Full article

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

More on the Tiger Temple

Following on from the news yesterday granting zoo status to the Thailand Tiger Temple I have spent the day reviewing, re-reading a mass of literature (both positive and negative) surrounding this place. I have been 'Templed out' many a time in my travels but today I am 'Tiger Templed out'. I have read so much. Although I already was against the place from things I had read over the years I tried to enter into my research like a virgin, with a free and open mind. I have ended the day just as convinced that this place is bad news. It is doing nothing apart from making big bucks for a few rich cats (not tigers). It is doing nothing at all for conservation. It is an accident waiting to happen.
You can read the results of my report by visiting:
The Tiger Temple in Kanchanaburi Thailand

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Good News for Tigers

Tom Kaplan: 'I have big plans for big cats'

US billionaire, Tom Kaplan, is funding a new Oxford University research centre in a bid to save endangered lions and tigers - and fulfill a childhood passion.

"It's time to put our asses on the line," says Tom Kaplan. "Otherwise we might as well give up." The American tough-guy slang sits incongruously with the soft voice and the immaculate business suit, but then a lot of things about Kaplan are incongruous.

Who could have predicted that a mild-mannered Oxford-educated historian, with a PhD in the politics of colonial Malaya, would make an absolute killing from mineral extraction, with assets valued at billions of dollars?

Who then could have predicted that, while still in his mid-forties, the billionaire minerals magnate would channel his energies and business acumen into saving big cats from extinction?

Peeping out from under his immaculate business suit is a bright orange wrist-band with the legend "Tigers Forever". His mission is to save tigers, he explains, not just by maintaining their present numbers, but by increasing their numbers by 50 per cent in the next 10 years. This unassuming businessman means business. Where others wring their hands, he acts.

New York-based Panthera, the charity which Kaplan founded in 2006, has rapidly become one of the biggest players in wildlife conservation in the world, with projects around the globe and spending on a scale – its various financial commitments are set to top $20 million in five years – which other agencies can only envy.

"I am a businessman because I am good at business," says Kaplan. "But big cats are my first love."

He first fell under their spell as a seven-year-old, when he was given a copy of The Maneaters of Kumaon by Jim Corbett. Soon his bedroom was lined with posters of tigers and other predatory felids. By the age of 10, he was tracking bobcats in Florida. By 11, he was jaguar-spotting in Colombia with his mother. A life-long passion had taken root.

And his love of animals runs in the family. He has been married for 10 years to Dafna, whom he met at high school in Switzerland, and who was later serving in the Israeli defence forces while he was at Oxford. They are now based in New York. Only their daughter, Orianne's fixation was snakes.

"Pop, you know you always said we should try to give something back?" she said, when she was just five. "Well, why don't we try to save indigo snakes?" Project Orianne, a Kaplan-founded snake conservation project in Georgia, was the result. A billionaire father can be a girl's best friend.

But childish sentiment alone is not going to save the world's big cats – the tigers and leopards and jaguars and other felids on the endangered species lists. Nor is money alone. For Kaplan, conservation involves the head as much as the heart.
"When I founded Panthera, I set out to procure the greatest talent in wildlife conservation. And I use that mercantile image advisedly. Whatever you are doing in life, you have to build a high-class vehicle to deliver your vision."

To that end, he has appointed Alan Rabinowitz, a fellow New Yorker and world-renowned conservationist, to be the CEO of Panthera. Rabinowitz was the driving force behind the Jaguar Corridor that now extends from Mexico to Argentina and is regarded as a model of wildlife conservation in practice. It is not enough to talk conservation; it is necessary to provide viable habitats, often spanning many different countries.

Similar "corridors" – effectively offering the big cats safe passage between their various natural habitats – are being considered for tigers in Asia and lions in Africa. One of the tiger corridors alone could stretch from Nepal to Malaysia. It is a colossal, visionary undertaking.

But outstanding leaders, as Kaplan knows from his business experience, need outstanding lieutenants. To that end, he is investing millions of dollars in endowing the scholarships and research grants needed to inspire a new generation of conservationists.

He has donated millions to his alma mater, Oxford University, where last week he welcomed students from around the world – Madagascar, Zimbabwe, Bhutan, Bolivia – to study conservation at the Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, which he is funding, and launched a new diploma course in international wildlife practice. "This is going to be the premier university-based felid conservation centre in the world," he says, with a note of pride.

When Kaplan talks about the big cats he has seen in the wild, it could be a schoolboy speaking. "I once saw a male and female tiger together in a reserve in Rajasthan. They must have mated about eight times in two hours! And after each time, the female cuffed the male, as if she was cross with him. Extraordinary."

Left to their own devices, he says, the animals would reproduce effortlessly. Unlike the giant panda, say, big cats are naturally prolific. But on a crowded planet, it can be hard to persuade people of the desirability of breeding more dangerous predators. There are now, dismayingly, more tigers in zoos than in the wild.

"People need to look at wildlife conservation in its totality," says Kaplan. "As soon as you lose the apex predator, it has harmful consequences right down the food chain."

Convincing others of that logic, winning the necessary hearts and minds, requires different strategies in different parts of the world. In Brazil, Kaplan has recently acquired huge cattle ranches on the edge of the forest. "Who would have thought it? Me, a vegetarian, buying 8,000 head of cattle?" But he knows that buying the land is the most practical way to protect his beloved jaguars. Under Brazilian law, the farmers would otherwise be entitled to shoot the jaguars if they preyed on their livestock.

He also knows that, at the intersection of forest and farmland, there will be what conservationists call an "edge effect": a flourishing eco-system at the point where two different habitats meet.

"Local communities need to be brought into the conservation process. They need to be treated as stake-holders. In a developing country like Brazil, there is huge scope for offering rural communities help with health care, say, in exchange for their cooperation."

Idealism may be at the heart of the projects which Panthera has undertaken, but Kaplan understands better than anyone the Realpolitik of conservation – the hard facts, the clinching arguments, the hidden interstices between money, power and land.

In Malaysia, he persuaded the government that they were not just conserving the tiger but, specifically, the Malayan tiger, a rare sub-species; he appealed to national pride, and did not just deal in wishy-washy slogans.

In Pakistan, he went one better, persuading then President Musharraf, not known as an animal-lover, to take a close interest in snow leopards: convening conferences and establishing leopard reserves. How did he do it? By quietly impressing on the Pakistani president how much kudos his country would get on the world stage from protecting its leopards, while India made such a hash of protecting its tigers.

Kaplan may be planning ahead, dreaming big dreams, making big plans, but he has not forgotten the lesson he learnt 20 years ago, when he was a history student at Oxford: it is the past of the planet that holds the key to the future of the planet.

"If you ask people to look too far into the future, they don't get it. You need to foster an understanding of the habitat destruction that has taken place in the past, and how we can avoid making the same mistakes. You need to explain and execute a strategy that shows people why wildlife is worth conserving."
For more information about the big-cats conservation charity Panthera, visit www.panthera.org

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/6005984/Tom-Kaplan-I-have-big-plans-for-big-cats.html