• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Javan Tiger May Not Be Extinct After All, DNA Analysis Of Hair Suggests

April 1, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Once declared extinct, a type of Indonesian tiger may still be around, recent DNA analysis has tentatively suggested. Much more research is needed to be certain, but conservationists say there is now a glimmer of hope the Javan tiger could still be out there, roaming the island’s forests.

The Javan tiger (Panthera tigris sondaica) was categorized as Extinct on the IUCN Red List back in 2008. Since then, there have been a handful of potential observations, each without substantiative evidence to back them up. However, in 2019, locals sighted what they thought was a Javan tiger near the village of Cipendeuy in the forest of South Sukabumi, West Java, alongside footprints and claw marks. They collected a single hair from a nearby fence.

Advertisement

Analysis of this hair points towards it belonging to a Javan tiger, although further research is needed to confirm its existence. “Whether the Javan tiger actually still occurs in the wild needs to be confirmed with further genetic and field studies,” the team concludes in their study.

Still, the prospect has stirred public interest, and even efforts among Indonesian conservationists to investigate whether this “extinct” big cat is indeed still alive and kicking.

“The research has sparked speculation that the Javan tiger is still in the wild,” Satyawan Pudyatmoko, the Indonesian ministry official who oversees conservation, told Reuters. “We have prepared and will prepare efforts to respond to it.”

According to Reuters, these include setting up camera traps and conducting extensive DNA sweeps, as well as seeking advice from genetics experts to identify any that may remain in the wild.

Advertisement

The Javan tiger was native to Indonesia, one of three subspecies of tiger formerly found in the country. In 2013, the Bali tiger (P. tigris balica) was also declared Extinct by the IUCN, leaving just the Sumatran tiger (P. tigris sumatrae) surviving.

Hunting and destruction of habitat are thought to be among the causes of the Javan subspecies’ extinction

In the new research, scientists studied mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) – maternally inherited genetic material found outside the nucleus – from the hair and compared it with that of a Javan tiger museum specimen, collected in 1930. Hair samples of several tiger subspecies and the Javan leopard (Panthera pardus melas) were used as controls. 

“From this comprehensive mtDNA analysis we conclude that the hair sample from South Sukabumi belongs to the Javan tiger, and that it falls in the same group as the Javan tiger museum specimen collected in 1930,” the team write.

Advertisement

Whether or not the subspecies still exists in the wild is another matter. But with the efforts the latest discovery has inspired, we might soon find out – and then, if it turns out there are still some Javan tigers out there, we’ll have to do what we can to protect them.

“If, for example, it is proven that it still exists, it will certainly become a protected animal,” Pudyatmoko told AFP. “It is the obligation of all parties, including the society, to participate in preserving their population.”

The study is published in the journal Oryx.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. ARK Invest’s Wood expects market rotation back to growth stocks
  2. Most Plant-Based Milks Are Poorer In Key Micronutrients Than Dairy
  3. The Physicist And Mathematician Who Claims He Can Beat Roulette
  4. Only 1 Percent Of Chemicals Have Been Discovered – How Can We Find The Rest?

Source Link: Javan Tiger May Not Be Extinct After All, DNA Analysis Of Hair Suggests

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Why Are People Talking About This “Square Structure” Captured On Mars?
  • The World Has Five Oceans, Not Four – Discover The Latest One
  • Just 80 Percent Of People Can Perceive This Optical Illusion And No One Knows Why
  • Something Other Than Geological Processes Or Humans Created These Caves
  • Can Black Holes Lead To Other Places In The Universe?
  • The Devastating Communication Problem Facing Light-Speed Travel
  • The Great British Pet Massacre: One Of The Saddest Tragedies Of 1939
  • Would A Vacuum-Filled Balloon Float?
  • Queen Ant Produces Babies Of 2 Different Species, For The First Time Ever We Have A Complete Map Of Brain Activity, And Much More This Week
  • Yes, Your Attention Span Might Have Shortened, But That Might Not Be A Terrible Thing
  • This May Be The First Known Portrait Of A Viking – And It’s A Sexually Rampant “Beard Fondler”
  • The Largest Snake In Captivity Is A Humongous 7.7-Meter Reticulated Python Called Medusa
  • Poo Power: How Animal Dung Could Unlock New Antibiotic Treatments
  • Perfectly Preserved Dinosaur Tail Found Inside 99-Million-Year-Old Amber Was Mistaken For A Plant
  • Why Aren’t Full Photos Of The Milky Way Real? A NASA Analyst Explains The Obvious
  • Freaky Ratfish Have Teeth Growing Out Of Their Foreheads, And They Use Them For Love
  • The Largest Turtle Ever Known To Have Lived Was An Absolute Unit
  • “It Literally Leapt Out Of The Rock At Us”: How Violent Storms Led To The Extraordinary Preservation Of Baby Pterosaurs
  • This Is The Reason Why Earth’s Core Exists, And It’s More Interesting Than You Might Think
  • Over 11 Million Years Of Evolution, Eyeless Cavefish Developed Blindness Independently Many Times
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version