A century ago, about 100,000 tigers roamed Asia. Their range spanned from Turkey to the eastern coast of Russia. “The tiger was the king of the jungle,” says Tony Lynam. He’s a scientist at the Wildlife Conservation Society.
Since then, the number of wild tigers has dropped. Today, there are only between 3,000 and 4,000 left in Asia. Their range is just a fraction of what it once was.
Lynam says that humans are to blame for their disappearance. People illegally hunt, or poach, tigers. They also cut down forests to build farms and homes. This destroys the habitat that tigers—and their prey—need to survive.
The biggest threat to tigers is a shortage of prey, such as deer and wild boars. “People are hunting all the animals that tigers eat,” says Lynam.