Well, tagging WWF in my Twitter thread about the #CrouchingTigerHiddenData work wasn’t successful: the account WWF_Tigers still ended up posting this statement on Twitter:
The image reads: @WWF_Tigers: “More privately-owned tigers exist in US than wild ones in the world. WWF continues to call on US legislation to better control ownership of big cats, and prevent them from being laundered into wildlife trafficking rings #HoustonTiger” The image is a link to the CNN news story about the tiger.
This is a problem.
The number of tigers WWF is quoting here is 14 years old.
They’re from that one non-peer-reviewed census by Werner in 2005. As far as I can tell, WWF has been sourcing their 2008 “Paper Tigers” report for an estimated number of 5,000 tigers in the United States for the past 11 years. (Only 1,129 of those were actually in private or “pet” homes) The authors who wrote that report didn’t do their own census work on US tiger populations - instead, they used Werner’s 2005 paper as a major basis for their analysis, noted that it might not be completely accurate because of off-grid / hidden tigers, and ended by concluding there’s a “rough estimate of some 5,000 tigers in captivity” in the US. There has not been a single follow-up study in over a decade that has checked if those numbers are still accurate. (Except for mine, which indicates they’re not).
More importantly, that report by WWF in 2008 found zero evidence that US tigers from the pet population were ending up in international black markets. They recommended a number of changes to the US regulatory system - like the closure of the generic tiger loophole in the Captive Bred Wildlife program - which have actually been implemented since, and laws about ownership and breeding of dangerous big cats in the US have only gotten stricter since 2008. It stands to reason that you’d expect less trafficking in that situation, not more. This assumption is reinforced by the fact that in all of the exposes about tiger farms and international black market trafficking of tiger parts published in the last couple years, not a single one even mentioned the participation of US entities or the involvement of US tigers!
So, to sum up, WWF’s tiger account is tweeting out 14-year-old data and actively contradicting the results of one of their organizations’ own major reports. Apparently the “number of pet tigers in the US” is such common knowledge now that even international conservation organizations don’t need to fact-check it before they make public statements.
I dropped some truth-bombs about my research and their sources in the replies to that tweet, as well as sharing more information about my work in retweets. Please come signal boost my comments on Twitter, because this is appalling and I want people to start paying attention. The link to their tweet is here, and my profile with my extended comments is here.















