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Species Unite

Sharon Guynup: The United States Has A Tiger Problem

Species Unite

elizabeth novogratz

Philosophy, Society & Culture

5.0911 Ratings

🗓️ 16 January 2020

⏱️ 41 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

There is a tiger problem in the USA. 

There are more tigers in captivity in the US then exist in the wild. The number of American tigers lies somewhere between five and ten thousand. We don't know the actual number because they mostly go unregulated. Sadly, most of these tigers live in cages in private homes, backyards, garages, or in cages in roadside zoos. Many of them are inbred, malnourished, and sick. There is absolutely no reason that this should be the fates of one of the most majestic creatures on the planet. 

What have we done? 

And, why are we still allowing it? 

Journalist and author, Sharon Guynup and photographer, Steve Winter spent two years investigating these questions for a story called, The Tiger Next Door, for December's issue of National Geographic. If you haven't read it, read it. Sharon's story is astounding. It involves the criminal underworld, wildlife trafficking, murder, and thousands of captive tigers living sad pathetic lives all over the USA. America has a serious problem with captive wildlife, and what we've done to tigers is cruel, dangerous, and absolutely unnecessary. 

Sharon is a hero for tigers. She has been reporting on them for years, mostly tigers in the wild, until 2016, when her investigation into the famed Thai Tiger Temple for National Geographic published strong allegations of illegal wildlife trade, causing Thai officials to confiscate the 147 tigers living at the temple and shut the operation down. 

Sharon and I met in New York in December to talk about her story. The two-year investigation that she and Steve Winter did is mind blowing and absolutely devastating for anyone who cares about wild animals. 

There are ways to combat this crisis right now. The first is to not participate in any wildlife tourism that includes selfies with wildlife or any type of handling of wild animals, and the second is to get behind and support The Big Cat Safety Act. 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You have to keep the mission and the goal in mind, which for me the goal is to save the last of the wild tigers.

0:08.0

I really want to see tigers exist for future generations.

0:12.0

I have a new granddaughter. Her name is Winter

0:15.0

Rose Ruggia. She's nine months old and I want her to live in a world where

0:22.2

there's still beauty, where there still is healthy wildlife,

0:26.5

where we still have functioning ecosystems.

0:29.2

And that's why I do this work. Hi, I'm Elizabeth Novograt's welcome to Species Unite, the podcast where we talk to people who are fighting some of the hardest fights on earth to stop the unnecessary suffering of animals.

0:53.0

Today's conversation is with Sharon Gineup.

0:56.0

Sharon's a freelance journalist, an author, a National Geographic Explorer,

1:00.0

and a global fellow at the Wilson Center.

1:02.0

She writes about wildlife and ecosystems

1:04.5

with a focus on wildlife trafficking

1:06.3

and conservation initiatives.

1:08.5

She wrote the December story

1:10.0

for National Geographic called The Tiger Next Door, which is all about the Tiger Problem

1:16.3

happening right here in the December issue of National Geographic,

1:32.0

the Tigers next door.

1:33.7

I want to talk a little about you and I know you've written about Tigers in the wild and wildlife

1:38.6

trafficking, but how did all this start?

1:41.0

I was a photographer from the age of 16 to 39 and then I went to

1:45.2

graduate school and studied both science, environment and journalism and

1:49.4

and switched gears and started to write. As a writer I followed my early childhood passion loving animals and my work has focused on the environment, pollution, wildlife, and eventually a lot of work on wildlife trafficking because if you're going to cover endangered species

...

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