Abstract

Simple SummaryThe Malayan tiger, with less than 200 individuals in Malaysia, is in an intermediate population crash. Anthropogenic disturbances (poaching, roadkill, and human–tiger conflict), environmental perturbation (decreasing habitat quality), and infectious diseases have been identified as factors leading to impending extinction. Preliminary findings from stakeholders indicate Peninsular Malaysia has an existing Malayan Tiger conservation management programme. However, to enhance the protection and conservation of the Malayan Tiger, the authority should re-assess the existing legislation, regulation, and management plan, and realign them to prevent population decline.The critically endangered Malayan tiger (Panthera tigris jacksoni), with an estimated population of less than 200 individuals left in isolated rainforest habitats in Malaysia, is in an intermediate population crash leading to extinction in the next decade. The population has decreased significantly by illegal poaching, environmental perturbation, roadkill, and being captured during human–wildlife conflicts. Forty-five or more individuals were extracted from the wild (four animals captured due to conflict, one death due to canine distemper, one roadkilled, and 39 poached) in the 12 years between 2008–2019. The Malayan tigers are the first wildlife species to test positive for COVID-19 and are subject to the Canine Distemper Virus. These anthropogenic disturbances (poaching and human–tiger conflict) and environmental perturbation (decreasing habitat coverage and quality) have long been identified as impending extinction factors. Roadkill and infectious diseases have emerged recently as new confounding factors threatening Malayan tiger extinction in the near future. Peninsular Malaysia has an existing Malayan tiger conservation management plan; however, to enhance the protection and conservation of Malayan tigers from potential extinction, the authority should reassess the existing legislation, regulation, and management plan and realign them to prevent further population decline, and to better enable preparedness and readiness for the ongoing pandemic and future threats.

Highlights

  • The critically endangered Malayan tiger (Panthera tigris jacksoni) is in an intermediate population crash leading to extinction in the wild by the decade

  • The zoos’ records consist of the Malayan tiger captive population based on datasets from the Department of Wildlife and National Parks (DWNP) Malaysia and the Malayan tiger (Panthera tigris jacksoni) Studbook which were extracted for this study [19]

  • The structured questionnaire was collected from 30 expert respondents (14 Malayan tiger captive facilities), including 20 local zoo respondents from five facilities, regarding the current governance of the ex situ Malayan tiger management

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Summary

Introduction

The critically endangered Malayan tiger (Panthera tigris jacksoni) is in an intermediate population crash leading to extinction in the wild by the decade. It is estimated that less than 200 individuals are left in fragmented and isolated rainforest habitats in Malaysia. The Malayan tiger is a large carnivore that plays an important ecological role by maintaining the balance between the interactions of predators, herbivores, and plant diversity for the stability of the rainforest ecosystems. The folk-tales of the mighty Malayan tiger can be traced back centuries in the. The myths have been written in articles such as some Malay Studies in the Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society [2], the Malay Annals rewrite by

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