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Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Hunt on as tigress leaves Ranthambore

A worried team of 35 forest officials and experts are on the trail of a two-year-old old tigress which ran away from the Ranthambore National Park last week. The young tigress seems to have retraced the path of another tiger, which strayed out of the park and was mowed down by a train in Darrah, in Jhalawar, in 2003.

Forest officials said in the last year alone at least five tigers have walked out of the national park. “There have been such incidents in the past, primarily because of over population in the park. There are around 40 tigers in the park now and it not possible for them all to exist in this space,” said Rajasthan Chief Conservator of Forests P S Somshekhar.

Stating that the tiger faces threat from poachers or even a scared, desperate populace, Rajasthan Principal Chief Conservator of Forests (PCCF) R N Mehrotra said: “Every effort is being made to track her down and lead her back to the park. The entire forest machinery in that area, covering five districts have been put on alert,” he said.

Ranthambore Deputy Conservator of Forests (DCF) R S Shekhawat confirmed that the tigress made a kill three days ago in Kota district’s Itawa region. “We have found some pug marks and are following all leads possible,” he said. “She was spotted in Itawa two days ago and is moving in a south easterly direction. Another 85 km and she will be inside the Darrah Sanctuary in Jhalawar district,” Shekhwat said.

The officials said that though the male-female ratio in Ranthambore was almost equal, stronger males drive out weaker ones. “But in this case it is a female, which makes the issue more serious,” Somshekhar said. Mehrotra asserted that the park could handle only about 35 tigers. “Though it is an excellent sign that the population is increasing, overpopulation is detrimental to the animal’s survival. Even as we expect another six mothers in the next four months, more cats will stray away from the park and the situation could get dangerous,” he said.

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/hunt-on-as-tigress-leaves-ranthambore/569440/2