Scientists announced late Monday the apparent discovery of a new tiger species.
No new tigers were found. Rather, a DNA analysis found one subspecies ought
to be considered as two.
The finding could help researchers who work to protect the endangered animals.
In 1900, some 100,000 wild tigers lived throughout much of Asia, from India
in the west to Sumatra and Indonesia in the south to Siberia in the east, scientists
say. Today there are fewer than 7,000.
Of eight traditionally classified subspecies of Panthera tigris, three have
gone extinct since the 1940s.
Strategies to slow the loss of tiger populations are tailored to each subspecies.
But these designations, based on geographic range and traits such as body size,
coat color, and striping patterns, may be flawed, researchers say.
The new study analyzed genetic material from more than 100 tigers, from Siberia
to China, Indochina, Malaya Peninsula, Sumatra, and the Indian subcontinent.
The analysis supported some traditional classifications, such as the Sumatran
and Bengal tigers. But it suggests the Indochinese subspecies should be divided
into two groups, representing a northern Indochinese and a peninsular Malaya
population.
That would make six rather than five living subspecies. The results "offer
valuable data for conservation strategies and captive breeding programs," the
researchers said in a statement today.
The study was led by Shu-Jin Luo of the Conservation Biology Graduate Program
at the University of Minnesota. It appears in the journal PLoS Biology.