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The majestic tiger has few places left to hide. Once it roamed free in vast mangrove forests that have been almost completely destroyed by humans. Poachers get a high price for tiger skins and other body parts used in traditional medicine.

There are only about 5,000 tigers left in the wild, down from more than 100,000 a century ago.

Animals like the tiger need large territories to survive. Two United Nations-backed projects are helping countries to protect and manage the remaining natural forests that are home to endangered species. At the same time, these conservation projects provide local communities that depend on forest resources with alternative livelihoods.

Straddling India and Bangladesh, the Sundarbans is one of the world’s last great coastal wetland ecosystems, covering some 10,000 square kilometers of mangrove forest. In recognition of their unique flora and fauna, parts of the Sundarbans in both countries have been declared World Heritage Sites.

The UN Development Programme (UNDP) is working with India and Bangladesh on a partnership project to conserve the biodiversity of the Sundarbans mangrove swamps where tigers still roam. The project will help extremely poor people living near the sites to develop other livelihoods such as tourism. "We want to reduce the dependence of local people on the forest," says Arin Ghosh, who looks after forests in India's West Bengal province.

Protected areas are becoming more isolated from other natural habitats making it hard to preserve their biodiversity. One solution is to connect protected areas with other forests and sanctuaries by regenerating the corridor links between them. This means helping people who live in the corridors to become less dependent on forest resources for their livelihood.

With funds from the United Nations Foundation and the Global Environment Facility (GEF), UNDP is implementing a project to conserve and rehabilitate the only forest corridor linking the Royal Chitwan National Park, a World Heritage Site in Nepal, to the upland Himalayan forest ranges—home to tigers and other endangered species. Local families will be trained in alternative livelihoods and villagers will receive incentives to promote wildlife guardianship and habitat preservation.

As part of the global effort to protect the planet's biodiversity, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) administers one of the world's largest conservation agreements-the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, known as CITES. Adopted in 1973, it became international law two years later.

More than 150 governments have ratified the treaty, which offers varying protection to more than 35,000 species of animals and plants, depending on their condition in the wild and the effect that international trade may have on them. CITES bans international commercial trade in species threatened with extinction, such as cheetahs, tigers, the great apes, many tortoises and birds of prey. It also protects other species, which are not threatened, but may be at serious risk unless international trade is strictly regulated.


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Photo credit: UN