When humans remove an animal from the food chain, the predators and the prey of that animal are greatly affected. The predators die of starvation and the prey overpopulate. When the predators dies, the predators of those predators die, and so on. The opposite happen with the extinct animal's prey. It's prey overpopulate, then overkill their prey. Then the prey of those prey overshoot and collapse. Eventually these disturbances will make their way to humans in the the form of death and disease.
no
Humans
Bengal tiger
To stop tiger extinction (of any kind) people ban hunting them, making hunting tigers or trading any thing from a tiger illegal.
at the moment the only predators of the Bengal tigers are humans
There are less than 3,500 wild tigers in the world - and less than 1,400 in India. They are very close to extinction in the wild. That said- they breed well in the care of humans and the gene pool can survive if managed properly so that healthy Bengal tigers can still exist.
The Bengal tiger is an apex predator - the top of the food chain - and has no natural predators.
Bengal tigers will act aggressively towards humans. A person should never attempt to approach a Bengal tiger in the wild.
Don't kill them.
There are six subspecies of tigers, with three considered critically endangered: the South China tiger, Malayan tiger, and Sumatran tiger. The other three are the Bengal tiger, Indochinese tiger, and Amur tiger, which are classified as endangered.
Tigers are the top of the food chain. Nothing eats them, but humans kill them.
the white tiger is almost extinct so its only "predator" is humans