PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

India releases tiger numbers as experts convene

2011-03-29
(Press-News.org) New Delhi, India – The Indian Government today released new tiger population numbers for the first time since 2007, indicating that numbers have increased in the country that has half of the world's remaining wild tigers.

The government estimated current tiger numbers in India at 1,706, up from 1,411 during the last count in 2007. However, the 1,706 figure includes an additional tiger reserve in the count, the Sundarbans, that contained 70 tigers. This area was not counted in 2007.

Therefore, when comparing the previous survey with the current one, the official estimate stands at 1,636 when leaving out the Sundarbans, or an increase of 225.

Figures were broken down by site with some populations showing increases, and others falling.

"As seen from the results, recovery requires strong protection of core tiger areas and areas that link them, as well as effective management in the surrounding areas," said Mike Baltzer, Head of WWF's Tigers Alive Initiative. "With these two vital conservation ingredients, we can not only halt their decline, but ensure tigers make a strong and lasting comeback."

The figures marked the opening of the International Tiger Conservation Conference, a three day meeting following on the heels of the groundbreaking Global Tiger Recovery Programme (GTRP), a worldwide plan to bring the species back from the brink of extinction which was forged in November 2010 at an international tiger conservation meeting in St. Petersburg, Russia organized by Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

The count was conducted by India's National Tiger Conservation Authority with key partners, including WWF, in the largest tiger population survey ever undertaken.

"These numbers give us hope for the future of tigers in the wild, and that India continues to play an integral role in the tiger's recovery," said WWF International Director General Jim Leape, who is chairing a conference session on the role of international and national partners in the GTRP's implementation.

In its detail, this tiger estimation exercise shows the importance India attaches to this prime conservation issue," said WWF India CEO Ravi Singh. "The results indicate the need to intensify field based management and intervention to go beyond the present benchmark, bringing more people and partners into the process."

Several areas in India, including those that are not Tiger Reserves and outside national parks, were intensively surveyed for the first time. The Moyar Valley and Sigur Plateau in Southwest India's Western Ghats Complex, that has been a focus of recent WWF conservation efforts, was found to contain more than 50 tigers. Similarly, the Ramnagar Forest Reserve outside Corbett National Park showed a good number of tigers.

In addition to high-level officials from the 13 countries that still have tigers, the conference is expected to hear from key NGOs and global partners in the GTRP, including the World Bank's Global Tiger Initiative, the Global Tiger Forum, WWF (World Wildlife Fund), WCS (Wildlife Conservation Society), the Smithsonian Institute, the wildlife trade network TRAFFIC, CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) and the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW).

Numbering more than 100,000 at the turn of the last century, tigers have lost more than 97 percent of their population and 94 percent of their home range in just 100 years. They live in increasingly isolated pockets of land in Asia and the Russian Far East in Indonesia, Malaysia, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, China and Russia. The Global Tiger Recovery Programme marks the first formalized international initiative to save the species from extinction.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Greengrade and LEEDuser Announce Integration Partnership to Improve LEED Process Efficiency

Greengrade and LEEDuser Announce Integration Partnership to Improve LEED Process Efficiency
2011-03-29
Greengrade, a collaborative online LEED management software tool that allows project teams to communicate, track, and manage LEED project information, today announced a new feature allowing users to access LEED information directly from LEEDuser. LEEDuser helps certify building projects through the key commercial and institutional LEED rating systems, with tipsheets, checklists, sample documentation and forms, forums, and more. "LEEDuser is all about saving time and money on LEED projects by providing the insights and help design and construction professionals need, ...

Analysis suggests cancer risk of backscatter airport scanners is low

Analysis suggests cancer risk of backscatter airport scanners is low
2011-03-29
Calculations by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco and the University of California, Berkeley estimate that the cancer risk associated with one type of airport security scanners is low based on the amount of radiation these devices emit, as long as they are operated and function correctly. "The doses are low – extremely low," said Rebecca Smith-Bindman, MD, a professor of radiology at UCSF, who made the calculations with Pratik Mehta, an undergraduate at UC-Berkeley. "The amount of radiation in these scans is so low that you don't have to be concerned ...

Twinkle, twinkle, quantum dot -- new particles can change colors and tag molecules

Twinkle, twinkle, quantum dot -- new particles can change colors and tag molecules
2011-03-29
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Engineers at Ohio State University have invented a new kind of nano-particle that shines in different colors to tag molecules in biomedical tests. These tiny plastic nano-particles are stuffed with even tinier bits of electronics called quantum dots. Like little traffic lights, the particles glow brightly in red, yellow, or green, so researchers can easily track molecules under a microscope. This is the first time anyone has created fluorescent nano-particles that can change colors continuously. Jessica Winter, assistant professor of chemical and ...

Bixby Land Company Acquires $58 Million in Industrial Properties

2011-03-29
Bixby Land Company, a leading commercial real estate operator and investment manager based in Orange County, Calif., has purchased four Class A industrial properties totaling approximately 850,000 square feet. The acquisitions increase Bixby Land Company's wholly-owned portfolio to more than 5 million square feet and point to Bixby's increasing investment activity as California property markets show signs of improvement. "Our investment in these high-quality properties is a reflection of our confidence in the recovery of commercial real estate, in particular the industrial ...

The Birth of a Novel: Josie Brown's THE BABY PLANNER is Nurtured by the Profession it Touts

2011-03-29
Conception is a blessed event, be it a child's, or a new book. That is novelist Josie Brown's contention. She should know. The idea for her fourth novel, The Baby Planner [Simon & Schuster/Gallery Books]--about a childless woman who channels her nurturing instincts toward her pregnant clients--was born in the reception area of her mammogram center. "I picked up the only reading material available: a local parenting magazine," explains Brown, who lives in the San Francisco Bay Area. "My own children are older, so it wasn't necessarily something I felt might interest ...

Deep-sea volcanoes don't just produce lava flows, they also explode!

Deep-sea volcanoes dont just produce lava flows, they also explode!
2011-03-29
Between 75 and 80 per cent of all volcanic activity on Earth takes place at deep-sea, mid-ocean ridges. Most of these volcanoes produce effusive lava flows rather than explosive eruptions, both because the levels of magmatic gas (which fuel the explosions and are made up of a variety of components, including, most importantly CO2) tend to be low, and because the volcanoes are under a lot of pressure from the surrounding water. Over about the last 10 years however, geologists have nevertheless speculated, based on the presence of volcanic ash in certain sites, that explosive ...

OAI: News of Fee Increase Highlights Peculiarities of Mich. Auto Insurance Market

2011-03-29
Last week, the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Associations (MCCA) announced it would be instituting a slight fee increase that will be passed on to policyholders in the state. Car insurance providers currently are required to pay the MCCA $143.09 per insured vehicle, which gets incorporated into the premiums of even the cheapest auto insurance companies in the state. That amount will be raised 1.3 percent starting in July. The fee revenue goes into an MCCA-administered fund that exists as a result of the unorthodox structure of Michigan's no-fault system. Unlike the ...

Bones conjure Yellowstone's ecological ghosts

Bones conjure Yellowstones ecological ghosts
2011-03-29
By taking a closer look at animal bones scattered across the wilderness landscape, a researcher at the University of Chicago has found a powerful tool for showing how species' populations have changed over decades or even a century. "The skeletons of long-dead animals lying on landscapes provide critical insight into our understanding of ecosystem history, especially how populations have changed," said the study's author, University of Chicago alumnus Joshua H. Miller, S.M.'05, PhD'09, a postdoctoral research fellow in biological sciences at Wright State University in ...

AmeriSus Partners with HomeSphere

AmeriSus Partners with HomeSphere
2011-03-29
Lakewood-based HomeSphere, Inc. announced today that they have entered into a partnership with the American Sustainability Initiative (AmeriSus) to effectively manage manufacturer rebates with their BRI and AllTrack applications. Inspired by the Sears kit houses of the 1930s, AmeriSus manages all design, engineering, product and technology selections, procurement, logistics and scheduling for home builders, in order to deliver all materials necessary to construct an affordable, super-efficient homes for the end consumer. AmeriSus catalog homes are designed to fit into ...

Human virus linked to deaths of endangered mountain gorillas

2011-03-29
For the first time, a virus that causes respiratory disease in humans has been linked to the deaths of wild mountain gorillas, reports a team of researchers in the United States and Africa. The finding confirms that serious diseases can pass from people to these endangered animals. The researchers are from the non-profit Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project; the Wildlife Health Center at the University of California, Davis; the Center for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University; and the Rwanda Development Board. Their study, which reports the 2009 deaths ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Mitochondria may hold the key to curing diabetes

Researchers explore ketogenic diet’s effects on bipolar disorder among teenagers, young adults

From muscle to memory: new research uses clues from the body to understand signaling in the brain

New study uncovers key differences in allosteric regulation of cAMP receptor proteins in bacteria

Co-located cell types help drive aggressive brain tumors

Social media's double-edged sword: New study links both active and passive use to rising loneliness

An unexpected mechanism regulates the immune response during parasitic infections

Scientists enhance understanding of dinoflagellate cyst dormancy

PREPSOIL promotes soil literacy through education

nTIDE February 2025 Jobs Report: Labor force participation rate for people with disabilities hits an all-time high

Temperamental stars are distorting our view of distant planets

DOE’s Office of Science is now Accepting Applications for Office of Science Graduate Student Research Awards

Twenty years on, biodiversity struggles to take root in restored wetlands

Do embedded counseling services in veterinary education work? A new study says “yes.”

Discovery of unexpected collagen structure could ‘reshape biomedical research’

Changes in US primary care access and capabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic

Cardiometabolic trajectories preceding dementia in community-dwelling older individuals

Role of ELK3 in ferroptosis of rheumatoid arthritis fibroblast-like synoviocytes

Team of Prof. Woo Young Jang Department of Orthopedic Surgery, KU Anam Hospital wins the Best Paper Award from the Korean Musculoskeletal Tumor Society

Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovation announces recipients of inaugural Keith Terasaki Mid-Career Innovation Award

The impact of liver graft preservation method on longitudinal gut microbiome changes following liver transplant

Cardiovascular health risks continue to grow within Black communities, action needed

ALS survival may be cut short by living in disadvantaged communities

No quantum exorcism for Maxwell's demon (but it doesn't need one)

Balancing the pressure: How plant cells protect their vacuoles

Electronic reporting of symptoms by cancer patients can improve quality of life and reduce emergency visits

DNA barcodes and citizen science images map spread of biocontrol agent for control of major invasive shrub

Pregnancy complications linked to cardiovascular disease in the family

Pancreatic cancer immune map provides clues for precision treatment targeting

How neighborhood perception affects housing rents: A novel analytical approach

[Press-News.org] India releases tiger numbers as experts convene