Global Tiger Day: WWF says more needs to be done to protect species in the wildPublished29 July 2021Image source, Ajay Varma / WWF-InternationalImage caption, Can you spot these two tigers hiding in the bushes? Numbers of wild tigers are up in India but it is not such positive news in other parts of the world.Image source, Christy Williams / WWFImage caption, Over the last 25 years tigers have become extinct in Cambodia, Lao PDR and Vietnam.Image source, Mihir Mahajan / WWF-InternationalImage caption, This tiger doesn't look that impressed! Conservation charity, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), is calling for more to be done to protect these big cats.Image source, Mihir Mahajan / WWF-InternationalImage caption, Becci May, Senior Programme Advisor for Asia at WWF-UK, said: "By putting the right measures in place, the populations of these beautiful big cats can recover. It鈥檚 not too late to reverse the decline of tiger numbers in mainland Southeast Asia, but it will require urgent action and political will."Image source, Dr Sanjay K Shukla / WWF-InternationalImage caption, This female tiger is taking a stroll with her cubs. Efforts to protect the animals in India have meant numbers there have risen, but they are still under threat from poaching, traps and loss of habitat.Image source, Hamirul ShahImage caption, This hidden camera caught a pic of this tiger in Malaysia. There has been a significant drop in numbers of the animal in the country although a local project by people living in the Belum-Temengor Forest Complex has led to a 94 percent reduction in active snares since 2017.Image source, Mihir Mahajan / WWF-InternationalImage caption, Tiger reserves are areas where the animals are protected. India is celebrating the approval of 14 sites with Conservation Assured Tiger Standards. It is hoped by next year, which is the Chinese year of the Tiger, more protections will be in place in other countries.Image source, Mihir Mahajan / WWF-InternationalImage caption, The WWF says that the efforts to save tigers will also help the natural environment by reducing the impact of climate change and natural disasters, and by providing jobs for people too.More on this storyWild tiger populations are increasing in five countriesPublished29 July 2020The tiger population in India is on the risePublished30 July 2019Super rare tigers photographed in the wildPublished1 August 2017