South China Tiger

№ 03 of 100

Critically EndangeredMammal · Big cat

South China Tiger

Panthera tigris amoyensis

No wild sighting has been confirmed in over three decades — the entire future of this tiger rests on around 200 captive descendants.

Estimated remaining 0 confirmed wild · ~200 captive Unknown
Range
China
Region
Asia
Habitat
Subtropical evergreen forest of south-central China (historic range)

The story

Once the most numerous tiger in China, the South China tiger was hunted as a pest until they vanished from the wild. A captive population descended from just six founders is the focus of breeding and rewilding programmes that hope, one day, to return tigers to China's southern forests.

What's killing them

  • Eradication campaigns of the 20th century
  • Habitat loss
  • Prey depletion
  • Inbreeding in captive population

Who's fighting for them

Logos are the property of their respective organisations and link to their official sites.

Quick answers

How many South China Tigers are left in the world?

Approximately 0 confirmed wild · ~200 captive. The South China Tiger (Panthera tigris amoyensis) is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List, and their population trend is unknown. Figures are estimates compiled from the IUCN Red List and conservation organisations.

Where does the South China Tiger live?

The South China Tiger is found in China (Asia). Their habitat: Subtropical evergreen forest of south-central China (historic range).

Why is the South China Tiger endangered?

The main threats to the South China Tiger are: Eradication campaigns of the 20th century; Habitat loss; Prey depletion; Inbreeding in captive population.

Who is working to save the South China Tiger?

Organisations working on South China Tiger conservation include Panthera — Wild Cat Conservation; International Union for Conservation of Nature — Species Survival Commission; World Wide Fund for Nature.