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Help secure the future of this mother tiger’s cubs – and all our Malayan tigers.
Donors will get a tax exemption receipt.
This beautiful image of a mother tiger and her playful cubs, captured on a camera-trap in late 2025, gives us hope that our conservation efforts are making a real difference.
However, we need to do more to save our Malayan tigers from the brink of extinction.

There are fewer than 150 Malayan tigers left in the wild.
Our critically endangered national animal is severely threatened by:
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Poaching and the illegal wildlife trade,
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Habitat loss due to deforestation and fragmentation,
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Overhunting of the tigers' main prey.
Thanks to the generous and important donations of our supporters, we have made progress in saving our Malayan tigers:
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Reduced snaring by more than 90% in Royal Belum, with zero active snares recorded since 2022—protecting tigers from one of their deadliest threats
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Ranger teams expanded from 12 in 2015 to 150 today, strengthening round-the-clock protection while supporting Orang Asli livelihoods
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A tigress with four cubs recorded in 2022 and a tigress with two cubs recorded in end 2025 via camera traps—rare and encouraging signs of recovery in the wild
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Royal Belum State Park achieved international CA|TS accreditation in 2023, recognising Malaysia’s progress in effective tiger conservation
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Strengthened national action against wildlife crime since 2022, including the establishment of the National Tiger Task Force and Wildlife Crime Bureau
© Emmanuel Rondeau / WWF-US