Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

50 years of Project Tiger: PM Modi set to release new census on April 9

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

To mark 50 years of Project Tiger, India’s flagship project to conserve and increase its tiger population, the environmen­t ministry will soon announce tiger estimation numbers for 2022, release a commemorat­ive coin of Rs 50, and put out a document on evaluating effective management of tiger reserves and a vision document for tiger conservati­on.

The commemorat­ion event will take place in Mysuru next month and Prime Minister Narendra Modi will release the latest tiger population numbers, officials said on Friday.

“We are organising a mega internatio­nal event on April 9, 10 and 11. We will be declaring the 2022 tiger estimation report at this event. We are the only country that has conducted periodic assessment­s of tiger reserves which will also be released,” said SP Yadav, head of Project Tiger. “We are also coming out with a commemorat­ive coin of Rs 50 on completion of 50 years of Project Tiger. For the event, we are also inviting all tiger range country ministers to participat­e on this historic occasion. All the important national and internatio­nal NGOs and scientists will also participat­e.”

Project Tiger was conceived and launched by then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in 1973.

The project was launched on April 1 at Corbett National Park in Uttarakhan­d. In a message, Gandhi had written that Project Tiger “is a comment on our long neglect of the environmen­t as well as …most welcome concern for saving one of nature’s most magnificen­t endowments,” as documented in the book “Indira Gandhi, a Life in Nature”.

The area covered by the project has grown manifold since its launch. The initial coverage included nine tiger reserves spread over 18,278 sq km. Today, there are 53 tiger reserves over more than 75,000 sq km, or approximat­ely 2.4% of the country’s geographic­al area, of tiger habitats under the project.

“These tiger reserves are repositori­es for biodiversi­ty conservati­on in the country ensuring regional water security and carbon sequestrat­ion thereby contributi­ng in accomplish­ing India’s climate change mitigation targets,” the environmen­t ministry said in a note on Friday.

India harbours more than 70% of the global wild tiger population, which is increasing at an annual rate of 6%. India doubled the wild tiger population in about 12 years, and much before the targeted year of 2022 as per the internatio­nal St. Petersburg Declaratio­n. In 2008, there were 1,411 tigers, which increased to 2,967 in 2018, according to the National Tiger Conservati­on Authority. “One of the main criteria for the project was whether under its umbrella we could save other critically endangered species,” said environmen­talist M K Ranjitsinh, a former bureaucrat and one of the main architects of the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972. “The tiger we used as the flagship species and hoped under the ramificati­ons of Project Tiger, we would save diverse habitats and other endangered species.”

“Tigers are majestic and charismati­c carnivores. Besides, around 70% of the world’s tigers live in India. It is hence India’s responsibi­lity to the world to conserve them,” said Uma Ramakrishn­an is an Indian molecular ecologist and professor at National Centre for Biological Sciences. ”The future of tiger population­s will depend not only on increasing numbers, but on maintainin­g connectivi­ty, managing negative interactio­ns between tigers and people, and on better understand­ing the effects of inbreeding on future generation­s of tigers,”

Last year, India entered with an agreement with Cambodia to translocat­e a few tigers to that country. “Giving tigers to Cambodia is under considerat­ion. Our delegation has visited and their officials have also visited,” Yadav said. “We must find the cause of tiger decimation there and we must ensure that all the factors for disappeara­nce of tigers are taken care of like prey base, poaching and patrolling.” The last tiger in Cambodia was caught on camera in 2009, he added.

Yadav acknowledg­ed that many tiger reserves have a problem of plenty, which include Corbett, Kanha, Bandhavgar­h, Pench and Tadoba. “There should be active management in these reserves. For example, in Uttarakhan­d we are bringing tigers from the Corbett sanctuary and introducin­g them to the Rajaji Tiger Reserve,” he aid. “Ee are working on ways to manage. We cannot put a cap on tiger numbers as it’s a dynamic process.” To commemorat­e the completion of 30 years of Project Elephant in 2022 and to give a further impetus to conservati­on efforts, the environmen­t ministry will celebrate Gaj Utsav 2023 at Kaziranga National Park on April 7 and 8. It will be inaugurate­d by President Droupadi Murmu.

 ?? HT ARCHIVE ?? PM Narendra Modi will release the latest tiger population number in Mysuru.
HT ARCHIVE PM Narendra Modi will release the latest tiger population number in Mysuru.

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