3 endangered Sumatran tigers, including 2 cubs, found dead in Indonesia
BANDA ACEH, Indonesia — Three critically endangered Sumatran tigers, including two cubs, were found dead in a conservation area on Indonesia’s Sumatra island after being caught in traps apparently set by a poacher, authorities said Friday.
The mother and a female cub were found dead Tuesday in the Leuser Ecosystem Area, a forested region for tiger conservation in Aceh province, said Agus Arianto, head of the conservation agency. The body of a male cub was found on Thursday about 15 feet away, he said.
An examination determined that they died from infected wounds caused by traps, Arianto said.
He said several traps similar to ones used to capture wild pigs on farms were found in the area of the bodies.
“Setting traps for pigs in a conservation area is very unlikely,” Arianto said, “This was intended to poach endangered animals for economic gain.” He said his agency would cooperate with law-enforcement agencies in an investigation.
Sumatran tigers, the most critically endangered tiger subspecies, are under increasing pressure from poaching as their jungle habitat shrinks, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. It estimated that fewer than 400 Sumatran tigers remain in the wild.
For 10 days, the London Zoo kept its newly arrived male Sumatran tiger Asim in a separate enclosure from Melati, the female tiger who was supposed to become his mate.
It was the latest in a series of killings of endangered animals on Sumatra. Conservationists have warned that the COVID-19 pandemic has led to increased poaching as villagers turn to hunting for economic reasons.
Early last month, a female tiger was found dead with injuries caused by a snare trap in South Aceh district.
An elephant was found without a head at a palm plantation in East Aceh on July 11. Police arrested an alleged poacher along with four people accused of buying ivory taken from the dead animal.
Aceh police also arrested four men in June for allegedly poaching a tiger with a snare trap and selling its remains for 100 million rupiah ($6,900). Days later, another Sumatran tiger died after it ate a goat laced with rat poison in neighboring North Sumatra province.
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