Throughout the world, thousands of tigers and other big cats are kept in appalling conditions in zoos, circuses, tiger farms, and as pets. In zoos, tigers repeatedly pace, frustrated because their hunting and territorial instincts are denied. In circuses, they are forced to perform for audiences, often through brutal training methods. And, an estimated 5,000 tigers are thought to be held by private individuals as “pets”; however, by their very nature, tigers are wild and potentially dangerous, and do not adjust well to a captive environment.
In recent years, the tiger farm industry has developed to such a point that the number of captive tigers in these facilities now outnumbers that of their wild counterparts. While the world has fewer than 4,000 wild tigers, China, Thailand, Vietnam, and Laos alone have an estimated 7,000-8,000 captive tigers. The same is true of the U.S.; it is thought that more captive tigers live in American basements, backyards, zoos, and manageries than live in the wild across the globe. Though a patchwork of laws regulating tiger ownership makes it impossible to know exactly how many tigers live in captivity in the U.S., experts estimate that the number is between 5,000 and 10,000.
With the help of supporters, Born Free rescues tigers and other big cats from lives of misery. We raise awareness of their conditions and provide lifetime care in spacious natural habitat sanctuaries:
- The Satpuda Landscape Tiger Programme (STLP) brings together a network of dedicated Indian conservationists working in seven tiger reserves in Central India, a key tiger landscape, to support forest departments, implement grassroots community conservation activities, and prevent conflict between people and tigers.
- Since 2002, Born Free has managed Bannerghatta Tiger Sanctuary: a sanctuary for rescued tigers in Bannerghatta National Park in southern India.
- Born Free supports Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre in Cambodia, which cares for and rehabilitates animals rescued from the illegal wildlife trade. We specifically support a tiger named Jasper who was rescued from poachers who stole him as a newborn cub.
We actively work to keep tigers out of captivity: