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Forest officials relocate tigress in Madhya Pradesh
Mandla
(Madhya Pradesh): Forest officials have airlifted
a tigress from the Kanha National Park to the Panna Tiger
Reserve in Madhya Pradesh in a bid to revive the tiger
population in that region. Officials often airlift tigresses
from national parks with enough tiger population to those
parks where the number has come down drastically. Recently
the authorities relocated tigresses from Bandhavgarh Tiger
Reserve and Kanha National Park to Panna Tiger Reserve
to check the fall in numbers. "There was scarcity of tigresses
in Panna Tiger Reserve. In order to revive the tiger population
in the reserve forest officials and government had planned
transferring tigers from other reserves. Earlier on March
3, we shifted one tigress from Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve
and now we are taking another tigress from Kanha National
Park," said HS Pabla, principal chief conservator of forests
in Madhya Pradesh. Kanha has nearly 75-100 tigers in the
reserve while Panna, which covers an area of 3500 square
kilometres has just two tigers. Experts say India's dwindling
tiger population will never recover and it will take a
miracle to save those left from habitat destruction and
poaching. Failure by authorities to understand the needs
of tigers and provide protection has led to numbers falling
to 1,300 now from around 3,700 in 2001/02. India has half
the world's surviving tigers, but their populations have
suffered, driven by a demand for tiger skins and bones
in China for traditional medicines.
-Mar 11, 2009
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