JAKARTA, Indonesia — Video cameras captured 12 critically endangered Sumatran tigers, including mothers with their cubs, in Indonesian forests slated to be cut down, wildlife activists said yesterday.
One of the videos shows three young cubs playfully chasing a leaf.
Another, triggered by an infrared sensor, recorded giant cats strolling across a clearing at night.
Sumatran tigers are on the brink of extinction because of the destruction of forests, poaching, and clashes with humans.
Their numbers have dwindled to about 400 from 1,000 in the 1970s, according to the World Wildlife Fund, which set up the cameras in Riau and Jambi provinces just three months ago.
