Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Upswing in India’s tiger count enduring

- HARI KUMAR

NEW DELHI — On Sunday, as India celebrated the 50th anniversar­y of an intensive conservati­on effort known as Project Tiger, there was success to report: The tiger population had nearly doubled in the decades since, to 3,167.

The results of the 2022 tiger census, the release of which was delayed because of covid, showed an increase of about 200 since the last census in 2018. Although the growth was much less than the previous four-year cycle, it was still steady.

“India is the largest tiger range country in the world,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in releasing the census after a 12-mile safari ride in the forests of the southern state of Karnataka. “These are the results of our conservati­on culture and people’s involvemen­t.”

Conservati­on analysts and forest officials say the collapse in tiger numbers in the middle of the 20th century was caused mostly by a rapid expansion of trophy hunting, a practice formerly restricted to

the colonial elite. While tiger numbers dwindled drasticall­y, cheetahs disappeare­d entirely from India.

“The time between independen­ce and 1972 was one of the worst periods for wildlife in India. Tigers were one of the main targets,” said Yadven-dradev Jhala, a former dean at Wildlife Institute of India who studied the tigers for nearly two decades. “If Project Tiger had not happened, arguably India may have lost its tigers by now.”

Steps the government took to reverse the decline included introducin­g anti-poaching measures, relocating villages to expand tiger reserves and buffer areas and improving those reserves.

When the efforts began, there were nine tiger reserves covering an area of more than 5,405 square miles. Over five decades, that expanded to 53 reserves in 18 states, consisting of 28,958 square miles — about 2.3% of India’s total area.

Tigers require space to roam in search of food. An adult male tiger needs a minimum of 27 to 39 square miles.

At the time of independen­ce, India had a human population of about 340 million. That left room for wildlife, with tiger numbers at around 40,000 then. Today, with India’s population nearing 1.4 billion, wildlife experts estimate that India can accommodat­e 4,000 to 10,000 tigers.

The rise in both population­s puts pressure on managing human-tiger conflict. Such conflict has at times spread panic and fear, stopping villagers from even going out to their fields.

In 2018, in the western state of Maharashtr­a, a tigress named T1 was shot dead by a profession­al hunter after several months of pursuit. T1 had fatally mauled about a dozen people in the state’s Yavatmal district, local authoritie­s said.

And despite careful government watch, tigers still die from causes like poaching, poisoning and electrocut­ion. From 2017 to 2021, India lost 547 tigers, including 154 to causes termed “unnatural.” Eighty-eight of the deaths in that period were attributed to poaching.

But the nation now feels rich enough in tigers to consider sending some abroad. Indian authoritie­s are in discussion with Cambodia to help revive the population there, which was wiped out by poaching and hunting.

In a related effort, India has received 20 cheetahs from African countries over the past year.

Although one of the imported cheetahs died because of a medical condition about six months after arrival, another gave birth to four cubs at a national park in central India.

“For decades, cheetahs had disappeare­d from India. We brought magnificen­t big cats from Namibia and South Africa,” Modi said Sunday. “Few days back in Kuno National Park, four beautiful cubs were born. After 75 years, cheetahs were born on Indian soil. That is a very auspicious start.”

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