Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Man vs wild: Four-yr leopard study begins in Maha

- Badri Chatterjee ■ badri.chatterjee@hindustant­imes.com

THE STUDY WILL USE 100

CAMERA TRAPS ON A ROTATIONAL BASIS WITHIN A 350-SQKM AREA ACROSS 7 ZONES IN MAHARASHTR­A

MUMBAI: The Wildlife Institute of India (WII), Dehradun, has begun a four-year exercise to track the leopard population in Junnar taluka of Maharashtr­a, in an attempt to address rising cases of human-animal conflict across seven zones in the region. The study, commission­ed by the Maharashtr­a forest department, aims to identify conflict hotspots and develop a list of recommenda­tions to prevent leopard attacks.

Located 150km from Mumbai, Junnar taluka is home to a mix of scrub forests, grasslands, sugarcane, and banana farms. Farms with large crop cover provide a safe shelter to leopards and their cubs. Swapnil Deshbratha­r, officer on special duty (wildlife), Mantralaya, said, “Junnar area is prone to such conflicts. The study got nod earlier this month to ensure both human and leopard population are safeguarde­d on priority. We have roped in WII to understand what mitigation measures can be taken.”

At a cost of ₹2 crore, the study will use 100 camera traps on a rotational basis within a 350sqkm

area across seven zones – Junnar, Otur, Khed, Shirur, Daund, Ghodegaon and Manchar. The exercise will be conducted for the next four months, and repeated every year. In March 2020, 10 leopards will be radio-collared.

According to the data collated by the forest department, there have been 5,383 total deaths between 1999 and 2018 in Junnar taluka, with 34 human deaths, 99 injuries, and 5,250 livestock deaths. In January, a fivemonth-old girl was killed by a leopard while she was sleeping next to her parents in Yedgaon village. In April, a woman saved her one-year-old child from a leopard attack, sustaining serious injuries. The latest kill was reported in October.

“A spike in cases has been observed this year (2019), with three deaths and 15 injuries, which is the highest since 2015 (4). A majority of the cases are accidental (human-leopards crossing each other’s paths by chance). However, there is no current estimation of the number of leopards in this region. All we know is their density per sqkm is high,” said JR Gowda, deputy conservato­r of forest, Junnar division. “The maximum number of deaths (11) was recorded in 2010. Since then, mortalitie­s have ranged between one and two over the years, but the current rise in incidents is a worry.”

Bilal Habib, head and scientist, department of animal ecology and conservati­on biology, WII, said, “We tried to understand the pattern of conflict based on data available with the forest department for the past 20 years. Details such as conflict incidents, hotspots, types of attacks, whether accidental or not, annual trend etc. have been developed. Using camera traps, we will identify emerging hotspots for conflict in the future. We will use radio-collars to observe leopard movement, and come up with appropriat­e recommenda­tions.”

Gowda said the department had identified Otur, Manchar and Shirur as ‘high’ conflict zones. “Located along the eastern end of the Nashik-Pune highway, these three zones have a massive expanse of sugarcane fields, and are adjacent to river basins with high leopard numbers. The study will be initiated from here,” he said. “This is a direct consequenc­e of rapid human encroachme­nt in the scrub forests and creating settlement­s and crop fields in the periphery of buffer areas,” said Kartick Satyanaray­an, co-founder and CEO of Wildlife SOS.

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