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Siberian tiger back from the brink of extinction in northeastern China

Chinese efforts to save endangered Siberian tiger appear to be paying off - their numbers may have doubled in recent years

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The growing population of Siberian tigers living in the wild in China could now be as high as 40. Photo: Reuters

In a lifetime of herding, Liu Xiangqing had never seen cows so scared.

Normally, at 6am, they would be gathered together, contentedly chewing and grazing in the dawn light. But this June morning, they were scattered through the pine scrub, pacing with agitation, their ears alert.

Liu took a quick head count and realised one was missing, a two-year-old bull.
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By the time the remains were located, the tail and thighs were missing, the entrails spilled in the dirt. There was a gash in the neck; claw marks raked down the torso. It was a sure sign: the Siberian tiger was back.

"In my whole life, I'd never seen a real tiger, but I knew it couldn't be anything else," said the elfin-like Liu, 52, who grew up in the remote village of Jintang in Jilin province , which is wedged between the borders of Russian and North Korea.

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Once believed nearly extinct in China, the Siberian tiger, the largest member of the cat family, is making a comeback, the result of a decade-long effort to restore its natural habitat by banning logging, hunting and trapping.

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