MalayMail-Jan 25

WWF-Malaysia clarified today that its 2009 study on tigers found the animals benefited only in a selectively logged part of a forest that also adhered to sustainable management, and not indiscriminate logging. Tiger Conservation Program communication manager Carol Debra said the study titled “The importance of selectively logged forests for tiger Panthera tigris conservation: a population density estimate in Peninsular Malaysia by D. Mark Rayan and Shariff Wan Mohamad” in 2009 was done to obtain information on density of tigers specifically in selectively logged forests. “It is important to note that the study refers to selective logging, not indiscriminate logging,” she said in a letter to Malay Mail. Rayan and Shariff who are both wildlife experts set up camp at the Gunung Basor Forest Reserve in Kelantan as part of a wide-ranging observation study on Malayan tigers. Their study covered an area of 120km, aided by infrared camera traps strategically positioned and running round the clock for nine months. The Kelantan government had received flak after report of tigers roaming around near Orang Asli villages in Gua Musang with one confirmed death due to a tiger attack on January 7. Read more at: https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2022/01/25/wwf-malaysia-says-its-study-only-showed-selective-logging-helping-tigers/2037524