View Full Version : Do you like Tigers?
ChrisH
08-04-2010, 01:52 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NKtqSSojgMc&feature=player_embedded
If so please, please help by signing the petition, telling your friends, support on Facebook and perhaps donate if you are able.
Watch tiger videos/Save the tiger (http://www.wwf.org.uk/how_you_can_help/donate_now/save_the_tiger/watch_tiger_videos/?pc=AHP001001&utm_campaign=tiger_campaign_2010&utm_medium=email&utm_source=TIGER2010-EM01-share_the_love)
Marigold2
08-05-2010, 02:16 AM
Done and forwarded to all.
ChrisH
08-07-2010, 06:34 AM
Thank you!:)
ChrisH
11-24-2010, 02:15 PM
Leonardo DiCaprio pledges $1m to help save tigers
Titanic star to donate part of his fortune to fund anti-poaching efforts, habitat protection and campaigns to raise awareness
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v11/CwmmawrJet/Micellaneous%202/Capture-2.jpg
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/nov/23/leonardo-dicaprio-save-tigers
Randi
11-24-2010, 03:10 PM
Thank you for posting this, Chris. I love tigers and hope the whole world will contribute to help save them! I didn't know that Leonardo DiCaprio was helping with this - hats off to him! :)
cassiesmom
11-24-2010, 03:14 PM
I love tigers! I will watch the video at home.
ChrisH
11-25-2010, 04:56 AM
Thanks guys. :D
and I'll join you in the hats off to Leo, Randi!
ChrisH
11-25-2010, 05:15 AM
Great news – Tiger Forum backs recovery plan with $127 million
World leaders meeting at the historic International Tiger Conservation Forum in St Petersburg this week have backed a plan to double tiger numbers by 2022 – and promised vital funding to help make the goal a reality.
Indian tiger two month old cub
World leaders from all the 13 countries that still have wild tigers have endorsed a Global Tiger Recovery Programme to double tiger numbers (from the current low of 3,200) by the year 2022 – the next Year of the Tiger
At the International Tiger Conservation Forum, hosted over the past few days in St Petersburg by Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin, governments have capped a year-long political process by promising around USD127 million in new funding to help bring tigers back from the brink of extinction.
Other money has been offered too. For instance the World Bank has offered a $100 million loan package to Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh to support tiger conservation work there. And the Global Environment Facility has committed $12 million in new funding to regional tiger projects that show benefits for biodiversity and reductions in carbon emissions.
Hollywood star Leonardo DiCaprio has announced a personal donation of $1 million to WWF to support our tiger conservation work.
WWF overall has committed to spend $50 million over the next five years on tiger conservation, and we hope to increase that to $85 million.
A turning point in tiger protection
Our director general, Jim Leape, is enthused by the outcome of the Tiger Forum, saying: “I’m confident we will look back on this as a turning point in the effort to save one of the world’s best-loved animals.
“We’ve never before seen this kind of political support to save a single species. Conservation efforts too often languish for lack of political will. Here in St. Petersburg we have seen political will at the highest level – heads of government committing themselves to saving the tiger, and laying out concrete plans.”
The Global Tiger Recovery Programme lays out a comprehensive set of actions to help tigers recover from decades of poaching and destruction of their forest homes. Now that we have the strategy and real political momentum for doubling tiger numbers, we need to see immediate action on the ground, especially an increase in anti-poaching and anti-trafficking work.
The initial funding commitments, largely made by the tiger range countries themselves, will help get action underway. But much more funding – as much as $350 million – is still needed from the international community in coming months.
The 13 tiger range countries will meet again during the next six months to secure more cash for the recovery plan and will finalise the long-term financing of the plan in July. They will also reconvene in December 2011 to monitor how well the 12-year-plan to save tigers is working.
http://www.wwf.org.uk/news_feed.cfm?uNewsid=4422
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