Tag: tiger

  • Low tiger count in Uttarakhand due to ‘poor photos’, claim state officials

    Express News Service

    DEHRADUN:  On World Tiger Day on July 29, Uttarakahnd’s position slipped to third in the countrywide count of the big cat, contrary to expectations that the state would stand second, sources said.

    State government officials after analysing the data released on the occasion realised that around 15 tigers could not be included in the final count. “Otherwise the results would have been different,” said an official, adding that it was clearly the negligence of the forest department staff.

    Sources in the Forest Department said: “In the Status of Tigers Predator and Prey India-2022 report, 15 tigers in three forest divisions of Uttarakhand were not included in the count due to lack of “adequate number of camera traps and some poor photographs.”

    “This is the reason that the number of tigers in the state remained at 560, forcing the state at number three in the tiger counter across the country.” Speaking to this newspaper, Chief Wildlife Warden Dr Sameer Sinha said: “There is no such misconception about tiger count. I have also spoken to Wildlife Institute of India (WII) officials who have justified the tiger census as per standards.”

    He said there would be a review meeting soon. “Whatever changes (in the counting method) are expected will be made,” Sinha said. The state forest department has realised its “mistake” and, according to the data released on World Tiger Day, Uttarakhand, which was ranked third with a count of 560, should technically have been in second place as the count of 15 tigers could not be included in the final count.

    Madhya Pradesh tops the list with 785 tigers, followed by Karnataka with 563 tigers. “Among the pieces of evidence, camera traps are used to assess tigers’ presence,” said a senior forest department official. 

    “Once the picture of the camera trap arrives, it is captured in the same location again. After this, the number of tigers is estimated by analyzing and studying all the captured photographs in depth,” said a senior forest department official.

    “The camera traps installed in Champawat, Almora and Dehradun forest divisions of the state were antiquated. At the same time, the forest personnel did not show enough interest, due to which the pictures of tigers were not clear,” an official said. The number of tigers in India has increased from 2,967 in 2018 to 3,682 in 2022, an annual rise of 6 per cent, according to the latest government data released on International Tiger Day.  India has become home to approximately 75 per cent of the world’s tiger population, the government said.

    DEHRADUN:  On World Tiger Day on July 29, Uttarakahnd’s position slipped to third in the countrywide count of the big cat, contrary to expectations that the state would stand second, sources said.

    State government officials after analysing the data released on the occasion realised that around 15 tigers could not be included in the final count. “Otherwise the results would have been different,” said an official, adding that it was clearly the negligence of the forest department staff.

    Sources in the Forest Department said: “In the Status of Tigers Predator and Prey India-2022 report, 15 tigers in three forest divisions of Uttarakhand were not included in the count due to lack of “adequate number of camera traps and some poor photographs.”googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    “This is the reason that the number of tigers in the state remained at 560, forcing the state at number three in the tiger counter across the country.” Speaking to this newspaper, Chief Wildlife Warden Dr Sameer Sinha said: “There is no such misconception about tiger count. I have also spoken to Wildlife Institute of India (WII) officials who have justified the tiger census as per standards.”

    He said there would be a review meeting soon. “Whatever changes (in the counting method) are expected will be made,” Sinha said. The state forest department has realised its “mistake” and, according to the data released on World Tiger Day, Uttarakhand, which was ranked third with a count of 560, should technically have been in second place as the count of 15 tigers could not be included in the final count.

    Madhya Pradesh tops the list with 785 tigers, followed by Karnataka with 563 tigers. “Among the pieces of evidence, camera traps are used to assess tigers’ presence,” said a senior forest department official. 

    “Once the picture of the camera trap arrives, it is captured in the same location again. After this, the number of tigers is estimated by analyzing and studying all the captured photographs in depth,” said a senior forest department official.

    “The camera traps installed in Champawat, Almora and Dehradun forest divisions of the state were antiquated. At the same time, the forest personnel did not show enough interest, due to which the pictures of tigers were not clear,” an official said. The number of tigers in India has increased from 2,967 in 2018 to 3,682 in 2022, an annual rise of 6 per cent, according to the latest government data released on International Tiger Day.  India has become home to approximately 75 per cent of the world’s tiger population, the government said.

  • Madhya Pradesh retains top position in tiger count with 785, Karnataka second

    By PTI

    BHOPAL: The number of tigers in Madhya Pradesh rose to 785 in 2022 from 526 in 2018, Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan said on Saturday as he greeted the state’s people on International Tiger Day.

    Union Minister for Environment, Forest & Climate Change Bhupender Yadav also congratulated Madhya Pradesh for retaining its status as the “leading tiger state of India.”

    As per the report ‘Status of Tigers: Co-predators & Prey in India-2022’, released by the National Tiger Conservation Authority and Wildlife Institute of India, Madhya Pradesh has the highest number of tigers in the country, followed by Karnataka (563) and Uttarakhand (560).

    Madhya Pradesh forests added 259 tigers in a span of four years, as per the survey.

    “It is a matter of great pleasure that as a result of cooperation of the people of our state and untiring efforts of the Forest Department, the number of tigers in our state has increased to 785 from 526 in four years,” Chouhan said in a tweet.

    Congratulating the people of the state for this success, he further said, “”Let us all together take a pledge to conserve nature for future generations on the occasion of International Tiger Day.”

    ”The tiger count in the state was 300 in 2006, but in 2010 the state slipped from its number one position as the tiger population declined to 257 against 300 in Karnataka.

    In 2014, Karnataka recorded 406 tigers while MP recorded 300 big cats.

    But the tiger population in Madhya Pradesh rose thereafter as it reclaimed the top position in 2018 with 526 big cats recorded against 524 in Karnataka.

    Madhya Pradesh has six tiger reserves: Kanha, Bandhavgarh, Panna, Pench, Satpura and Sanjay-Dubri Tiger Reserve.

    Union minister Yadav also took to Twitter to congratulate Madhya Pradesh for the achievement.

    “”With 785 tigers as per the latest tiger estimation exercise, MP is the Leading Tiger State of India! This reflects MP’s commitment to conserving tigers through intensive protection and monitoring by involving local communities,”” he said.

    BHOPAL: The number of tigers in Madhya Pradesh rose to 785 in 2022 from 526 in 2018, Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan said on Saturday as he greeted the state’s people on International Tiger Day.

    Union Minister for Environment, Forest & Climate Change Bhupender Yadav also congratulated Madhya Pradesh for retaining its status as the “leading tiger state of India.”

    As per the report ‘Status of Tigers: Co-predators & Prey in India-2022’, released by the National Tiger Conservation Authority and Wildlife Institute of India, Madhya Pradesh has the highest number of tigers in the country, followed by Karnataka (563) and Uttarakhand (560).googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    Madhya Pradesh forests added 259 tigers in a span of four years, as per the survey.

    “It is a matter of great pleasure that as a result of cooperation of the people of our state and untiring efforts of the Forest Department, the number of tigers in our state has increased to 785 from 526 in four years,” Chouhan said in a tweet.

    Congratulating the people of the state for this success, he further said, “”Let us all together take a pledge to conserve nature for future generations on the occasion of International Tiger Day.”

    ”The tiger count in the state was 300 in 2006, but in 2010 the state slipped from its number one position as the tiger population declined to 257 against 300 in Karnataka.

    In 2014, Karnataka recorded 406 tigers while MP recorded 300 big cats.

    But the tiger population in Madhya Pradesh rose thereafter as it reclaimed the top position in 2018 with 526 big cats recorded against 524 in Karnataka.

    Madhya Pradesh has six tiger reserves: Kanha, Bandhavgarh, Panna, Pench, Satpura and Sanjay-Dubri Tiger Reserve.

    Union minister Yadav also took to Twitter to congratulate Madhya Pradesh for the achievement.

    “”With 785 tigers as per the latest tiger estimation exercise, MP is the Leading Tiger State of India! This reflects MP’s commitment to conserving tigers through intensive protection and monitoring by involving local communities,”” he said.

  • Tiger found hanging from tree trap in Madhya Pradesh

    By Express News Service

    BHOPAL: In a horrifying incident, a male tiger aged around two years was found hanging from a tree trap in the Panna district of ‘Tiger State’ Madhya Pradesh on Wednesday morning.

    While the state forest and wildlife authorities have begun a probe into the tiger’s killing, noted wildlife activist Ajay Dubey described it as the first incident of a tiger being hanged to death through an animal trap in the country in the last two to three decades.

    He has also demanded a CBI probe into the entire incident as Panna and adjoining areas have long been notorious for organized poaching, owing to which Panna Tiger Reserve (PTR) has become almost extinct of tigers since 2008. 

    According to Sanjiv Jha, forest conservator (Chhatapur) the death of the tiger was reported around Tuesday night, but it was only on Wednesday morning when the team reached the spot did they find a noose around the tiger.

    The incident took place in the jungles near Vikrampur village of Tilgaon forest beat of North Panna Forest Division, which is just outside the protected area.

    “Already the sniffer dogs from adjoining Satna as well as the Panna National Park are in action on ground, while a team of state forest department’s Tiger Strike Force too has joined the on-the-spot investigations. While the autopsy findings alone will establish the real cause of the tiger’s death, circumstantial details suggest that the tiger fell prey to the trap (clutch wire trap) put in place for other animals,” said Jha.

    “We’re appealing to local residents to share with us any information about the tiger’s death. Their names will be kept confidential. We’re also trying to ascertain the dead tiger’s identity by matching its carcass’ picture with a database of tigers at Panna Tiger Reserve,” he added.

    Ajay Dubey said that never before in his career of 20-22 years had he even heard of a tiger weighing around 200-250 kg being hung from a trap. “There have been incidents of tigers being killed by using electric current flowing fencing and other ground traps, but never this,” he added.

    “How can such incidents happen, when the Panna Tiger Reserve is well equipped with technologies, like night vision cameras, drones and satellite-collared tigers?” he questioned.

    He added, “It’s quite possible that the tiger has fallen prey to a trap kept for some other animal, but only a specialized agency like the CBI, which has expertise in probing narcotics and wildlife crimes, can handle a case of such magnitude.”

    As per the figures available with the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) – the statutory authority under Project Tiger – Madhya Pradesh reported a maximum of 270 tiger deaths in the country between 2012 and July 2022, followed by 184 in adjoining Maharashtra and 150 in Karnataka.

    As per the latest NTCA figures, Madhya Pradesh lost 42 tigers in 2021, while the tiger mortality count to date (including the tiger found hanging to death in Panna district on Wednesday morning) in the year 2022 stands at 32.

    BHOPAL: In a horrifying incident, a male tiger aged around two years was found hanging from a tree trap in the Panna district of ‘Tiger State’ Madhya Pradesh on Wednesday morning.

    While the state forest and wildlife authorities have begun a probe into the tiger’s killing, noted wildlife activist Ajay Dubey described it as the first incident of a tiger being hanged to death through an animal trap in the country in the last two to three decades.

    He has also demanded a CBI probe into the entire incident as Panna and adjoining areas have long been notorious for organized poaching, owing to which Panna Tiger Reserve (PTR) has become almost extinct of tigers since 2008. 

    According to Sanjiv Jha, forest conservator (Chhatapur) the death of the tiger was reported around Tuesday night, but it was only on Wednesday morning when the team reached the spot did they find a noose around the tiger.

    The incident took place in the jungles near Vikrampur village of Tilgaon forest beat of North Panna Forest Division, which is just outside the protected area.

    “Already the sniffer dogs from adjoining Satna as well as the Panna National Park are in action on ground, while a team of state forest department’s Tiger Strike Force too has joined the on-the-spot investigations. While the autopsy findings alone will establish the real cause of the tiger’s death, circumstantial details suggest that the tiger fell prey to the trap (clutch wire trap) put in place for other animals,” said Jha.

    “We’re appealing to local residents to share with us any information about the tiger’s death. Their names will be kept confidential. We’re also trying to ascertain the dead tiger’s identity by matching its carcass’ picture with a database of tigers at Panna Tiger Reserve,” he added.

    Ajay Dubey said that never before in his career of 20-22 years had he even heard of a tiger weighing around 200-250 kg being hung from a trap. “There have been incidents of tigers being killed by using electric current flowing fencing and other ground traps, but never this,” he added.

    “How can such incidents happen, when the Panna Tiger Reserve is well equipped with technologies, like night vision cameras, drones and satellite-collared tigers?” he questioned.

    He added, “It’s quite possible that the tiger has fallen prey to a trap kept for some other animal, but only a specialized agency like the CBI, which has expertise in probing narcotics and wildlife crimes, can handle a case of such magnitude.”

    As per the figures available with the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) – the statutory authority under Project Tiger – Madhya Pradesh reported a maximum of 270 tiger deaths in the country between 2012 and July 2022, followed by 184 in adjoining Maharashtra and 150 in Karnataka.

    As per the latest NTCA figures, Madhya Pradesh lost 42 tigers in 2021, while the tiger mortality count to date (including the tiger found hanging to death in Panna district on Wednesday morning) in the year 2022 stands at 32.

  • Shoot-to-kill order against man-eating tiger that killed seven in Bihar

    Express News Service

    PATNA:  The National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) has ordered the NTCA forest authorities to shoot a man-eater tiger that has reportedly killed seven people in the Valmiki Tiger Reserve (VTR) forest division in Bagaha of West Champaran district.

    The man-eater remains elusive even as 400 forest personnel are on its trail, officials said. On Thursday night, the tiger got its latest victim — a 35-year-old man. The resident of Dumari village was attacked by the animal when he had gone to the field. He was the seventh victim of the tiger attack. After his death, irate villagers damaged a vehicle of the forest department.

    Bihar chief wildlife warden Prabhat said an order has been issued to shoot the man-eating big cat. Earlier, a 12-year-old girl, Bagdi Kumari, was fast asleep in her cot when a tiger killed her at Singahi village in VTR’s Raghia range past midnight on Thursday.

    When the girl started screaming after the tiger held her in its jaw, her family members woke up but could not do anything as the animal carried her away. The girl’s body was recovered from a sugarcane field after the local people started chasing it.

    This was the eighth tiger attack in which seven people have died in nine months, a senior forest officer said. VTR director-cum-conservator of wildlife Dr Neshamani said the authorities are ascertaining if the same tiger has been behind all attacks.

    For over 26 days, the authorities have been trying to cage a tiger that has strayed out of the VTR area. The rescue team is facing serious problems as the tiger keeps changing its location.Shooters have joined around 400 forest personnel in locating the tiger. “Rain is also disturbing our operation. The tall sugarcane crop has made the task for forest personnel even more difficult,” said a forest official.

    PATNA:  The National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) has ordered the NTCA forest authorities to shoot a man-eater tiger that has reportedly killed seven people in the Valmiki Tiger Reserve (VTR) forest division in Bagaha of West Champaran district.

    The man-eater remains elusive even as 400 forest personnel are on its trail, officials said. On Thursday night, the tiger got its latest victim — a 35-year-old man. The resident of Dumari village was attacked 
    by the animal when he had gone to the field. He was the seventh victim of the tiger attack. After his death, irate villagers damaged a vehicle of the forest department.

    Bihar chief wildlife warden Prabhat said an order has been issued to shoot the man-eating big cat. Earlier, a 12-year-old girl, Bagdi Kumari, was fast asleep in her cot when a tiger killed her at Singahi village in VTR’s Raghia range past midnight on Thursday.

    When the girl started screaming after the tiger held her in its jaw, her family members woke up but could not do anything as the animal carried her away. The girl’s body was recovered from a sugarcane field 
    after the local people started chasing it.

    This was the eighth tiger attack in which seven people have died in nine months, a senior forest officer said. VTR director-cum-conservator of wildlife Dr Neshamani said the authorities are ascertaining if the same tiger has been behind all attacks.

    For over 26 days, the authorities have been trying to cage a tiger that has strayed out of the VTR area. The rescue team is facing serious problems as the tiger keeps changing its location.Shooters have joined around 400 forest personnel in locating the tiger. “Rain is also disturbing our operation. The tall sugarcane crop has made the task for forest personnel even more difficult,” said a forest official.

  • Maharashtra: Tiger spotted in Kinwat range of Nanded district

    By PTI

    AURANGABAD: Images of an adult tiger were captured in camera traps installed by the forest department in Kinwat range of Maharashtra’s Nanded district, an official said on Thursday.

    The big cat had come to eat its prey which it had hunted earlier this week, the official said.

    A tiger had been spotted in the vicinity of Mandva village located in Kinwat forest range, where it had earlier killed a cow, he said.

    Following this, forest officials installed trap cameras and on Tuesday, the tiger came back to eat its prey, and was captured on camera, assistant conservator of forest Ganesh Giri told PTI.

    “We had earlier detected its presence by its pugmarks, and now, the presence of tiger is confirmed on camera. We have a huge forest area of nearly 12,000 hectares in Kinwat. There is a wildlife sanctuary named Tipeshwar in the nearby district. There is a chance the tiger would have come from that side,” the official said.

    Forest teams have been formed to monitor the movement of the big cat, he added.

  • Maharashtra: Aurangabad zoo to trade pair of tigers for nilgais from Pune

    By PTI

    AURANGABAD: Siddharth Zoo in Maharashtra’s Aurangabad will trade a pair of tigers with the zoological park in Pune in exchange for a couple of nilgais, an official said on Wednesday. Aurangabad-born tigress named Bhakti and tiger Arjun will be sent to Pune’s Rajiv Gandhi Zoological Park in exchange for a pair of nilgais, director of Siddharth Zoo Shahed Shaikh said.

    “Siddharth Zoo currently has just two nilgais and the new pair will help increase their population in the facility,” the official said. Zoo supervisor Sanjay Nandan said, “Five-year-old Bhakti and seven-year-old Arjun will be sent to Pune. The zoos had discussed about the exchange of animals and a proposal sent to the Central Zoo Authority last month has been approved.”

    Siddharth Zoo currently has 14 tigers, including five cubs, the official added.

  • Six tigers missing since last year from Ranthambore National Park

    By PTI
    JAIPUR: Six tigers are missing nearly for the past year from Rajasthan’s Ranthambore National Park, according to an official.

    Two of them are cubs, national park’s Field Director T C Verma said, adding that they were last seen in March and April last year.

    Since there is no evidence of natural death or poaching, it is most likely that the tigers moved out to other forest areas, he said.

    Verma said that the tigers were from different ranges.

    We are trying to locate the tigers, he said.

  • Five cops among eight arrested for possessing tiger skin in Chhattisgarh

    By Express News Service
    RAIPUR: Acting on a tip-off, a joint team of Chhattisgarh police and the forest department in Bastar seized a tiger skin from a vehicle that was on its way to Jagdalpur from Dantewada on Friday.

    “We seized a tiger skin from a vehicle following a tip-off. The eight people who were detained revealed during interrogation that the tiger skin was meant for some religious ceremony on the occasion of Shivratri in Jagdalpur city. All eight persons including five police personnel deployed in the Bastar zone. Two health workers have also been taken into custody under various Sections of Wild Life (Protection) Act 1972 for possessing the tiger skin”, said Sunderraj P, Bastar Range IG.

    The confiscated tiger skin measured 223 cm in length and a width of 48 cm.

  • Relocated tiger flees Rajaji Tiger Reserve, forest department in huddle to track it 

    By PTI
    RISHIKESH: A tiger translocated recently to Rajaji Tiger Reserve has fled from its Motichoor range creating panic among people living in the periphery of the forest area.

    The five-year-old male tiger dropped its radio-collar in the enclosure meant for it and fled somewhere, Principal Chief Conservator of Forests Rajiv Bhartari said.

    The big cat was translocated to Rajaji Tiger Reserve from Corbett Tiger Reserve recently.

    This is the mating season for tigers and the translocation had been done in the hope of strengthening the tiger population at Rajaji Tiger Reserve, especially in the western part, according to officials.

    Bhartari admitted that fleeing of the big cat from its enclosure was a jolt to the tiger relocation project of the Uttarakhand government.

    In the present circumstances it has become difficult to keep track of the movement of the big cat, he asserted.

    However, as the radio collar had been dropped in the enclosure, forest guards remained under the illusion that the tiger was still there.

    The situation is being reviewed in accordance with the guidelines of the National Tiger Conservation Authority to deal with the challenge and ensure that an incident like this does not occur in future, Bhartari said.

    He said it will also be probed who radio-collared the tiger after tranquilising it before translocating it from the Dhela range of Corbett to Rajaji Tiger Reserve.

    All efforts are focussed at the moment on tracing the tiger, the official said.

    People living on the outer fringe of Rajaji Tiger Reserve are in panic with a big cat on the loose in the area.

    Director of Wildlife Institute of India Dhananjay Mohan said such incidents have also occurred in the past. There can be many factors behind it, he added.

    “There are other ways to monitor the movement of the tiger which will be utilised to track him,” Mohan said. The Wildlife Institute of India is a partner in the ongoing tiger relocation project of Uttarakhand.

  • PM Modi lauds work on animal conservation

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday lauded the efforts undertaken by the government towards animal conservation, following the release of the “Status of Leopard in India” report which recorded a surge in the population of leopards in the country.

    “Great news! After lions and tigers, the leopard population increases. Congratulations to all those who are working towards animal conservation. We have to keep up these efforts and ensure our animals live in safe habitats,” Prime Minister Modi tweeted.

    This comes after the Union Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change released the status of Leopard on Monday. India’s population of leopards has gone up 60 per cent and the country now has 12,852 leopards, the ministry has said.

    Releasing the “Status of Leopard in India 2018” report, Union Minister for Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Prakash Javadekar said that increase in numbers of Tigers, Lions and Leopards over the last few years is a testimony to the conservation efforts and of the fledgeling wildlife and biodiversity of the country.