Kazakhstan plants 37,000 trees to prepare for the return of wild tigers
Tiger reintroduction in Kazakhstan marks a landmark moment for global conservation. The country has planted 37,000 trees in the Ili River delta to restore tugai forest habitat, paving the way for Amur tigers to eventually replace the extinct Caspian tiger in Central Asia. The two subspecies are genetically near-identical, making this scientifically credible rather than speculative. With over a million hectares of protected land and growing prey populations, Kazakhstan offers rare conditions for success. It is a decades-long effort, but one that proves extinction does not always have to be the final word.









