2006年VOA标准英语-Tigers Threatened by Human Poaching and Develop(在线收听) |
By Craig Fitzpatrick ------------- The tigers at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. will never go hungry or be poached for their body parts. But the same cannot be said for wild tigers that populate the forests of India and Southeast Asia.
Scientists from various environmental organizations gathered recently at the zoo to present their findings from a decade-long study. They warn that tiger populations worldwide are declining faster than had been predicted. The crisis was created by the expanding human populations in India and Southeast Asia. People encroach on tiger habitat, kill tigers illegally, and hunt the game that tigers prey upon. Mr. Seidensticker says the forests are bare. "Many of the forests of Asia are devoid of prey. Tigers need large deer, wild pigs. In India they eat gaur, which is a large wild cattle. And it's loss of prey that's actually one of the biggest things that threatens tigers." Tigers are poached for their valuable parts. Tiger skin is in great demand from an increasingly affluent Asian population. Tiger bone has been used in traditional medicine for hundreds of years. The poaching goes on despite laws in most countries making trafficking in tiger parts illegal. India has even established parks for the protection of tigers, but the trend continues. Mr. Trandahl explains why poaching has become a means to earn money. "The hard part is you have very poor populations surrounding many of those parks. And suddenly poaching a tiger is very attractive because you can earn more by poaching one animal than you could by working a full year." Trandahl says there is hope, thanks to more private and public funding. "The study gives us both good news and bad news. The good news is, we looked at our investments over the last 11 years, and we find that those targeted populations that we've been investing in are not only stable but some are actually expanding." Some of those stable and expanding populations can be found in the Russian Far East and on the border between Nepal and India. Scientists say with proper funding, education and government protection more areas can become habitable and help secure the long-term survival of these majestic animals. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/7/33696.html |