Hindustan Times (Jammu)

India lost over 1k tigers since 2012: Govt report

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com HT

India has lost 1,059 tigers since 2012 with Madhya Pradesh, which is known as the ‘ tiger state’ of the country, recording the highest number of deaths of striped felines.

According to the National Tiger Conservati­on Authority (NTCA), 75 tigers have died this year so far, while 127 had died last year, the highest in the 20122022 period.

As many as 106 tiger deaths occurred in 2020; 96 in 2019; 101 in 2018; 117 in 2017; 121 in 2016; 82 in 2015; 78 in 2014; 68 in 2013 and 88 in 2012.Madhya Pradesh, which has six tiger reserves, logged the maximum number ( 270) of deaths during this period, followed by Maharashtr­a (183), Karnataka (150), Uttarakhan­d (96), Assam (72), Tamil Nadu (66), Uttar Pradesh (56) and Kerala (55).

Rajasthan, Bihar, West Bengal, Chhattisga­rh and Andhra Pradesh saw 25, 17, 13, 11 and 11 tiger deaths, respective­ly.

Madhya Pradesh has lost 68 tigers in the last one-and-a-half years, while Maharashtr­a has seen 42 tiger deaths in this period.

In the 2018 Tiger Census,

Madhya Pradesh recorded the maximum number of deaths.

Madhya Pradesh had emerged as the ‘tiger state’ of India with 526 tigers, followed by Karnataka which had 524 tigers.

According to data, 193 tigers died due to poaching in the 20122020 period. Data of deaths due to poaching since January 2021 is not yet available.

The authoritie­s identified “seizure” as the reason for the death of 108 tigers, while 44 big cats died due to “unnatural” causes in this period.

According to the NTCA, poaching is considered as the reason for all tiger deaths in the beginning. Supplement­ary details like post mortem reports, forensic and lab reports and circumstan­tial evidence are gathered for closing a particular case as either “natural”, “poaching” or “unnatural but not poaching”.

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