A man-eating tiger is dead. And that's good for other tigers.
After killing and eating more than a dozen villagers in India over the last two years, an elusive tigress was shot dead by government-hired hunters on November 2.
Killing endangered wild tigers certainly isn't ideal, as there are only some 2,150 to 3,150 adults left in the wild, globally. But, in the unusual case that a tiger begins hunting people, it's necessary that the tiger be killed, or if possible, relocated.
The legendary cats' greater existence, in a human-dominated world, depends on it.
"When you have a tiger that’s killed 13 people, that really undermines the conservation effort," John Goodrich, a tiger biologist and chief scientist at the wild cat conservation group Panthera, said in an interview. Read more...
More about India, Conservation, Tigers, Predators, and ScienceCOntributer : Mashable https://ift.tt/2RHq4z8
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