Sunday

All posts tagged Sunday

Need corridor so tigers don't fight to death
28 Dec, 2012, 10.08PM IST, IANS
economictimes.indiatimes.com
JAIPUR: Even as the Wildlife Conservation Society recently reported a 50 percent increase in the population of tigers in the wild in India with their population now estimated at 3,200 after years of dangerously dwindling numbers, there is fresh cause for worry for tigers in sanctuaries.

As tiger-numbers increase in reserve areas, territorial fights are becoming frequent. In Rajasthan’s Ranthambore National Park, the large number of tigers dying because of such fights has led to the state government planning for a corridor connecting this sanctuary with the adjoining Keladevi Sanctuary, an official said Friday.

The new corridor will come up at an estimated cost of Rs.200 crore.

About 45 villagers will need to be relocated to create the corridor, an official said.

The decision to create such a corridor was taken following the mysterious death of a yet-to-identified tiger in Ranthambore recently. Senior forest department officials said preliminary investigation hints at the possibility of the majestic cat being killed in a territorial fight.

“The state government has sought Rs.200 crore from the central government for developing the corridor. We are hopeful of receiving the money in the near future,” a senior forest department officer told IANS.

Four tigers were killed in territorial fights over the past four years in Ranthambore National Park, leaving environmentalists worried that as the tiger population increases, there is also need to create a habitat in which they can thrive.

The tigers are overlapping each other’s territory. To get their share of space, the big cats are fighting each other to death in the reserve in Sawai Madhopur district, some 150 km from Jaipur, wildlife experts said.

A tigress died in the reserve area Dec 23, and the death was attributed to a territorial fight with another cat. The mutilated, maggot-ridden carcass of the tigress was recovered from the reserve’s Gilai Saga-Khadar area early Sunday morning, officials said.

A senior forest department officer told IANS that a probe has been launched into the animal’s death.

“Prima facie, injuries suggest the death occurred in a territorial fight with another tiger. However, we are awaiting the post-mortem report to ascertain the cause, and rule out poaching,” a wildlife officer said.

The number of such fights had been increasing in the recent past, the officer said.

A tiger named T-36 died of serious head injuries during a territorial fight with T-42 Aug 22, 2010. The body of tigress T-4 was found April 4, 2009. Officials had concluded that she was attacked by another tiger in a territorial fight.

Similarly, tigress T-15 was killed Sep 1, 2008.

According to a census conducted by the state forest department in 2009, there were 40 tigers in and around Ranthambore National Park and Sawai Madhopur wildlife sanctuary. The census conducted in the core division from April 30 to May 10, 2009 revealed that there were 14 males, 16 females and 10 cubs.

However, a recent survey found that the number of tigers has increased to 52, including 26 cubs.

“The core area of the reserve is spread over 1,113.36 sq km. Besides, the buffer zone earmarked by the state government around the reserve is 297.9 sq km. The area is inadequate for housing 52 tigers,” a wildlife expert said.

He added that a tigress may require a 20-sq km territory, while the individual territories of males are much larger, covering 40-80 sq km or more.

 

cee4life -WARNING GRAPHIC DEATH OF KERAL TIGER – BUT WAIT!!! Theres more… Someone had the presence of mind, and time to film the death of this BEAUTIFUL CRITICALLY ENDANGERED TIGER… BUT DIDNT HAVE THE PRESENSE OF MIND TO CALL THE PROFESSIONALS IN TO SAVE HIS LIFE !!!!!!!!!!!!!
(Click on Title to View Video)
Report on the tiger killing at Wayanad

Man-animal conflict has led to the killing of a male tiger near the Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary in north Kerala on Sunday. The forest officials shot dead the beast which apparently had been attacking d

omestic animals of the human settlement near the sanctuary.

Under pressure from the locals and their political representatives, a team of forest officials with the help of their counterparts from Karnataka have been trying to capture the tiger for the last one week. The personnel had placed four cages with live baits in different places but could not capture the beast. They even placed surveillance cameras and used trained elephants to tour the forest areas.

On Sunday morning, the forest team spotted the tiger in a private land and shot a tranquilising dart. But it could not tame the tiger. So they fired another one, following which the animal turned against the team. Sanctuary wildlife warden S Sreekumar said at this stage the team, comprising veterinary surgeons, had little option but to fire the killer shot.

“We have invoked the section 11 (1) A of Wildlife Act for self-defence. Otherwise, the animal would have attacked the men,” he said.

crtsy: indianexpress/asianet

 

BHOPAL: The leopardthat strayed into the residential pockets of the state capital, creating panic, followed the bait and landed in the cage that was arranged by the forest staff to catch i

t near the Indian Institute of Forest Management (IIFM) on Sunday morning. The forest staff later took the trapped leopard to Van Vihar rescue centre and after check-up was released into the Satpura Tiger Reserve area in Hoshangabad district.When the bait (goat) kept in a couple of cages placed strategically in a few places where the sightings of the animal were reported failed to achieve any result, the forest department officials used a voice device to lure the leopard into the cage. A member of the team that caught the leopard informed that they had placed a device that had prerecorded bleats of a goat.