Below, on our "Program Sponsorships" page, you will find a list of projects that have been proposed to us but for which we still have not found funds and current programs requiring ongoing funding. Each project is individually described, including a budget for the moneys required to complete the proposed work and information about the people involved. Should you be so inclined, you can make your mark in tiger conservation by sponsoring one of these projects as it sole benefactor. You can watch - and let the world watch - as your contribution makes a one-of-a-kind difference.

If, however, your interests are more inclined towards the well being of an individual tiger rather than an entire project, you can choose to "adopt" a wild tiger. The work that we have sponsored in Indonesia involves a process known as camera trapping, in which individuals' tigers are photographed via remote control cameras. These tigers can be uniquely identified by the pattern of their stripes, and they can be followed through the progress of their lives as they are repeatedly photographed. We offer you the opportunity to fund the research and law enforcement involved in following and preserving the life of an individual wild tiger, in return for which you will be identified as the exclusive adoptive "keeper" of that animal, and you will be kept personally apprised of every development in the animal's life - from its first sighting through all of its trials and triumphs, maybe even including the birth of its own cubs.

 
The Tiger Foundation would like to highlight two programs that are especially in need of funding. These are initiatives that are designed to achieve quantifiable wild tiger conservation results.

 
The Tiger Foundation is proud to offer you the opportunity to become the exclusive sponsor of a wild Sumatran Tiger; one sponsor, one tiger. We believe that this program is unique in the world. For an annual donation of US$10,000 you can become the sole recognized sponsor and protector of one of seven selected tigers out of the 37 Sumatran tigers that currently reside in Way Kambas National Park on the Island of Sumatra, Indonesia.

 
The Tiger Foundation is in need of institutional building grants that will help it expand its activities in order to have an even greater positive impact on wild tiger populations.