December 24, 2009 12:00 PM
- Text
Rare Tigers Die in Russian Circus
(AP) Two rare Siberian tigers were among a group of big cats in a Russian traveling circus that died during a 20-hour truck journey this week, a circus administrator said Thursday.
Veterinarians suspect the animals were suffocated by exhaust fumes in the enclosed truck, which was heated to counter outside temperatures below minus-30 degrees Fahrenheit.
Circus officials and police initially said that eight Bengal tigers had died.
But Mechta circus administrator Yevgeny Kudashkin said there were seven tigers and two were Siberian tigers, which some conservationists fear may be approaching extinction.
The loss of the endangered tigers - also known as Ussuri, Amur or Manchurian tigers - was certain to increase the outrage over the animals' deaths.
A lioness also died during the trip across Siberia to the city of Yakutsk, where the circus was due to perform.
The animals appear to have been killed by exhaust fumes, Darya Kokhunova, deputy director of the Irkutsk veterinary laboratory, said. She cautioned that the tests were not yet complete.
The Siberian tiger is rapidly disappearing from the forests of Russia's Far East and the Chinese province of Manchuria due to poaching and loss of habitat.
The New York-based Wildlife Conversation Society estimates that only 300 remain in the wild. They are the largest tiger species, weighing up to 600 pounds.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has done much to draw attention to their plight. During a visit to a wildlife preserve in 2008, he shot a female tiger with a tranquilizer gun and helped place a transmitter around her neck as part of a program to track the rare cats.
Later in the year, Putin was given a 2-month-old female Siberian tiger for his birthday. State television showed him at his home gently petting the cub, which was curled up in a wicker basket with a tiger-print cushion. The tiger, called Mashenka, now lives in a zoo in southern Russian.
Tigers remain a popular attraction in many of the dozens of permanent and traveling circuses in Russia.
Veterinarians suspect the animals were suffocated by exhaust fumes in the enclosed truck, which was heated to counter outside temperatures below minus-30 degrees Fahrenheit.
Circus officials and police initially said that eight Bengal tigers had died.
But Mechta circus administrator Yevgeny Kudashkin said there were seven tigers and two were Siberian tigers, which some conservationists fear may be approaching extinction.
The loss of the endangered tigers - also known as Ussuri, Amur or Manchurian tigers - was certain to increase the outrage over the animals' deaths.
A lioness also died during the trip across Siberia to the city of Yakutsk, where the circus was due to perform.
The animals appear to have been killed by exhaust fumes, Darya Kokhunova, deputy director of the Irkutsk veterinary laboratory, said. She cautioned that the tests were not yet complete.
The Siberian tiger is rapidly disappearing from the forests of Russia's Far East and the Chinese province of Manchuria due to poaching and loss of habitat.
The New York-based Wildlife Conversation Society estimates that only 300 remain in the wild. They are the largest tiger species, weighing up to 600 pounds.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has done much to draw attention to their plight. During a visit to a wildlife preserve in 2008, he shot a female tiger with a tranquilizer gun and helped place a transmitter around her neck as part of a program to track the rare cats.
Later in the year, Putin was given a 2-month-old female Siberian tiger for his birthday. State television showed him at his home gently petting the cub, which was curled up in a wicker basket with a tiger-print cushion. The tiger, called Mashenka, now lives in a zoo in southern Russian.
Tigers remain a popular attraction in many of the dozens of permanent and traveling circuses in Russia.
Popular Now in World
- Pakistani fishermen reel in 40-foot whale shark
- Iran: We can attack U.S. interests "anywhere"
- Syria rebels bloodied, battered, but defiant
- "Voluptuous" Ukrainian nurse abandons Qaddafi
- Girl with Two Heads Born in Philippines
- Booze and bikinis in a new Egypt
- Cockpit error sent 737 into Pacific nose dive
- Israel To U.S.: Don't Delay Iraq Attack
- Syria's Christians stand by Assad
- 23 women convicted of child pornography in Sweden
- Stephen Hawking: Heaven is "a fairy story"
- 130 Doctors Without Borders staff go missing
- GlobalPost: Qaddafi apparently sodomized
- Greek Cruise Ship Sinks
- Costa Concordia wreck seen from space
- Iran helping al Qaeda? War "hysteria" builds
- Report: U.S. to slash Iraq Embassy staff
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- Donald Trump blasts plans for Scottish wind farm
- Is the new VW Beetle diesel worth the money?
- Aaron's falls on concern over chairman's comments
- Grains futures, livestock prices fall
on Facebook
- Tenn. father charged with murdering couple who"unfriended" daughter on Facebook
- Adele opens up about vocal cord surgery
on CBS News






