Nobuyuki Yamaguchi, Carlos A. Driscoll, Lars Werdelin, Alexei V. Abramov, Gabor Csorba, Jacques Cuisin, Bo Fernholm, Michael Hiermeier, Daphne Hills, Luke Hunter, Hiroyuki Itakura, Ulf S. Johansson, Vitaliy Kascheev, Katrin Krohmann, Thomas Martin, Malgosia Nowak-Kemp, Igor Ya. Pavlinov, Francis Renoud, Louise Tomsett, Steven van der Mije, Elena Zholnerovskaya, Colin Groves, Andrew C. Kitchener, Vincent Nijman, David W. Macdonald
Mammal Study 38 (3), 187-198, (1 September 2013) https://doi.org/10.3106/041.038.0307
KEYWORDS: Central Asia, conservation, Indonesia, museum, Sunda Islands
Recent advances in multivariate statistics, and in ancient DNA techniques, have greatly increased understanding of tiger phylogeography. However, regardless of advances in analytical methodology, researchers will continue to need access to specimens for morphological measurements and sampling for genetic analysis. The tiger has become increasingly endangered, and out of the nine putative tiger subspecies, three (Javan, Balinese, and Caspian) have become extinct in the last 100 years, leaving the specimens kept in natural history collections as the only materials available for research. Frustratingly little information is widely available concerning the specimens of these extinct tiger subspecies. We conducted an extensive search for specimens of extinct tiger subspecies, and also developed a simple on-site method to assign unprovenanced and probable Indonesian specimens to either Javan/Balinese or Sumatran subspecies. We located a total of 88 Javan, 11 Balinese, and 46 Caspian tigers, including seven new Javan tigers, and three Balinese tigers that were not widely known previously. These specimens are critical for research in order to understand the intraspecific phylogeny and evolutionary history of the tiger.