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0 reviews''Ron Tilson, director of conservation at Minnesota Zoo, co-author of a new edition of the encyclopedic Tigers of the World and, with decades of fieldwork in Asia's tiger habitats under his belt, [is] an authority - maybe the authority - on our most endangered big cat.''-''Tale of the Cat'' by Andrew Marshall (Time magazine)An excellent follow-up to the 1987 publication
The 102 contributors represent a broad panel of distinguished international researchers
[E]ach chapters terminology and research descriptions are layperson-friendly. There is very little repetition between the two editions; the first focused heavily on tigers in captivity, while the second emphasizes wild tiger conservation, history, economics, and political battles
. Highly recommended. Academic, general, and professional audiences, all levels.''-- CHOICE''Some of the world's most eminent researchers confirm this in a new academic book, Tigers of the World. In it Ronald Tilson, an expert at Minnesota Zoo, reveals he attended a meeting in Beijing where Chinese scientists admitted that their captive ''pure-bred'' South China tigers were anything but. He wrote: ''A Chinese molecular biologist, Daniel Xu, presented the surprising conclusions that no 'pure' South China tiger lineages are left living; all living captive tigers are mixed with Indochinese tiger genes.'' -- The Sunday Times''Tilson, who is probably best known for his work with tigers, wrote the book on tiger conservation -- literally. ''Tigers of the World,'' published in 1988 and updated last year, ''put together in one volume, for the first time, the state of science about tigers,'' said Phillip Nyhus, professor of environmental studies at Colby University in Maine.