6-year-old Aust'n girl donates inheritance to save tigers
Source: Xinhua   2016-06-20 17:27:00

CANBERRA, June 20 (Xinhua) -- A six-year-old girl from Canberra has been given the naming rights of the newest addition to the Australia Zoo, a tiger cub, after donating the inheritance from her grandparents to a "Wildlife Warrior" program.

It is believed Audrey Joyce's donation was in the thousands of dollars, but the amount will remain undisclosed.

After making her donation, Joyce was granted the naming rights of the new 11-week-old cub, which she chose to name "Reggie."

The young Australian became a "Wildlife Warrior" after she said she gave her money to the wildlife conservation program, which is aimed at protecting endangered species.

"They (poachers) want their faces, skin and their bodies to make money from them," Joyce told the Australian Associated Press (AAP) on Monday.

It seems there was a secondary reason for Joyce's generosity: "I was born in the Year of the Tiger," she said.

The newly named tiger cub, Reggie, is the third Sumatran tiger arrival this year, taking the Australian zoo's tiger population to 14.

Australia Zoo's tiger manager, Geoff Neubecker, said on Monday the zoo had donated more than 1.5 million U.S. dollars to help defend poaching.

"It's great to see the next generation wanting to donate to save wildlife," Neubecker told AAP.

"It's creating awareness and will go to protecting tigers in the wild."

The cub's parents are from the first Sumatran tigers to be released from Indonesia in more than 30 years.

Editor: chenwen
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6-year-old Aust'n girl donates inheritance to save tigers

Source: Xinhua 2016-06-20 17:27:00
[Editor: huaxia]

CANBERRA, June 20 (Xinhua) -- A six-year-old girl from Canberra has been given the naming rights of the newest addition to the Australia Zoo, a tiger cub, after donating the inheritance from her grandparents to a "Wildlife Warrior" program.

It is believed Audrey Joyce's donation was in the thousands of dollars, but the amount will remain undisclosed.

After making her donation, Joyce was granted the naming rights of the new 11-week-old cub, which she chose to name "Reggie."

The young Australian became a "Wildlife Warrior" after she said she gave her money to the wildlife conservation program, which is aimed at protecting endangered species.

"They (poachers) want their faces, skin and their bodies to make money from them," Joyce told the Australian Associated Press (AAP) on Monday.

It seems there was a secondary reason for Joyce's generosity: "I was born in the Year of the Tiger," she said.

The newly named tiger cub, Reggie, is the third Sumatran tiger arrival this year, taking the Australian zoo's tiger population to 14.

Australia Zoo's tiger manager, Geoff Neubecker, said on Monday the zoo had donated more than 1.5 million U.S. dollars to help defend poaching.

"It's great to see the next generation wanting to donate to save wildlife," Neubecker told AAP.

"It's creating awareness and will go to protecting tigers in the wild."

The cub's parents are from the first Sumatran tigers to be released from Indonesia in more than 30 years.

[Editor: huaxia]
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