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10/26/2003
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In a major win for tiger conservation, Dreamworld's Tiger Island will
welcome a 14-month-old female Sumatran tiger later this month as part of
an international effort to help save the species.
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The golden tiger, named Soraya, will be imported from Tier Park Zoo in
Berlin, Germany, to increase breeding options for the Australasian Species
Management Program for Sumatran Tigers, which is internationally recognised
and supported by governments throughout the region. Soraya is scheduled to
arrive at Dreamworld on October 30.
With less than 400 left in the wild, Sumatran tigers are listed as one of
the world's most critically endangered species by the Convention for
International Trade of Endangered Species of Flora and Fauna (CITES), which
is supported by 190 countries world wide.
Dreamworld's Tiger Island was nominated as the new home for Soraya, by the
international Species Coordinator for Sumatran and Amur Tigers, Sarah
Christie, a leading member of the European Endangered Species Program and
Curator for London Zoo.
Ms Christie, who visited Dreamworld in 2001, said she based her decision on
the park's existing tiger facilities, expertise, significant conservation
efforts and the need to increase the genetic diversity of Sumatran Tigers
in the Australasian region.
The import of Soraya will boost the number of Sumatran tigers in the
Australasian region to 19 (nine male, ten female) across 12 zoos, namely:
Dreamworld, Taronga (Sydney), ACT, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, Western
Plains Zoo (Dubbo), Mareebra Park (Cairns) and Mogo zoo (NSW) plus
Auckland, Wellington and Hamilton zoos in New Zealand. There are currently
235 Sumatran tigers in zoos world-wide.
Dreamworld's Tiger Island is also home to seven Bengal tigers and plays a
leading role in tiger conservation world-wide through donations and
hands-on involvement with conservation field projects actively saving
tigers in the wild. In fact, Dreamworld, this week, donated another $33,000
to conservation charity Flora and Fauna International to help save a small
pocket of Sumatran tigers in Sumatra.
Dreamworld's Chief Executive Officer Tony Braxton-Smith said the park was
honoured and excited to receive its first Sumatran Tiger especially, one of
such high genetic importance to the Australasian region.
He said Soraya would not meet or mix with Dreamworld's other Bengal tigers
who have been hand raised since birth.
"Soraya has had limited human contact and can not be handled so she will
be
held in a state-of-the-art off-exhibit area at Tiger Island which has been
built to Australian standards and approved by Australian Quarantine and
Inspection Services (AQIS) and Environment Australia," Mr Braxton-Smith
said.
Dreamworld's Tiger Island is one of only two interactive tiger facilities
in the world where handlers and tigers play, wrestle and swim together all
day.
A registered zoo, Dreamworld is located on Queensland's Gold Coast, 25
minutes north of Surfers Paradise and 40 minutes from Brisbane. The park is
open from 10am to 5pm every day except Christmas Day and Anzac Day morning
(25/4).
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