Since the South China Tigers China is "South China Tigers [one of the most endangered tigers in the world]" China Action Plan to Save South China Tiger "(State Forestry Administration , 2000). The China National Forestry Bureau has formulated this plan because it is necessary to minimize the threat of human extinction against these tigers. Without intervention, the South China tiger will be extinct. Historically, "South China tiger is widely distributed [about 2,000 kilometers from east to west, about 1,500 kilometers from north to south" (State Forestry Administration, 2000).
In the early 1950s, China estimated an estimated 4,000 South China tigers, but under hunting pressure, this number was reduced to 200 in 1982. Despite occasional unidentified reports over many years, the South China tiger is considered extinct in the wild. The breeding program has been successful and efforts are being made to reintroduce aquaculture tigers into the wild. However, there are still major challenges, such as lack of space to learn to kill tigers, degradation of habitat, small gene pools.
The South China tiger (Panthera tigris amoyensis) is the smallest among all tiger subspecies, it is also the most serious endangered species. The actual number is hardly known, but depending on the estimate it may be less than 20. Others would say that the estimate is very high and South China tigers are wild and extinct. In reality, in the past 20 years I have never seen a South China tiger. South China Tiger is native to the provinces of Fujian, Guangdong, Hunan, Jiangxi and other southern China. But now, only Chinese zoo can find less than 100 South China tiger remaining on the surface of the earth. South China Tiger has been designated as a highly endangered species by the International Conservation Union for Nature
Sadly, the Southern Tiger has not been discovered since the 1970s, so it is considered to have been extinct in the wild. Sumatran tiger is the only surviving trichodone species in Indonesia, and as of 2008, it is listed as a highly endangered species by IUCN. Compared to the population estimate of 1978, the number of tigers today is less than 500 people. Of the five species of the Rhinocerotidae family, three are one of the most endangered species in the world: black rhinos, Javan rhinos, and Sumatran rhinoceros. Javan 's rhinoceros is in danger of extinction and there are only 60 survivors in Java' s National Park in Indonesia. Sumatran rhinoceros is very at risk. It is estimated that there are fewer than 100 species in the wild now. Black rhinoceros is listed as a species very endangered by IUCN and three variants declared extinct in 2011