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Sunday, January 16, 2011

'Man-mauling tigers still in area of attack'

LUCKNOW: The man-mauling tigers of Katarniaghat have been localised. The fresh pugmarks show that big cats are present in the same area, where they had made the killings. Three men have been killed in feline attacks in Katarniaghat between January 6 and 11. The men were killed at different spots and at different points of time.

"There have been no killings after that. We have got fresh pugmarks at the place and can say that tigers are still present in the same area," said a forest officer. The pugmark impression pads have been made in the area to track the movement of tigers. And on the basis of pugmarks obtained, officials said that tigers might have not moved to a new area.

The monitoring is on. The experts from WTI and tiger biologists are present at the spot. The first human killing was reported from Sadar beat of Katarniaghat range on January 6. The man was killed by a feline when he had gone to the sugarcane field in the morning. His body was recovered about 50 metres away from boundary of jungle. The body was intact and not eaten.

The second killing came a day after that and body was recovered from the dense part of forest in the same range. The left foot was missing. There was no way to prove if the body was eaten by the tiger or any other animal. The spot was 12 kms away from the place where the first killing took place. The last killing was made on January 11 in Nishangadha range.

The forest officers at the spot shared that in two cases it could be the tigress which killed the men. "If they are same or different is difficult to say but so far it appears that there are three different tigers," said an officer. Patrolling is on in the area. Elephants have been called for combing operations. Locals are being constantly told to be cautious.

Katarniaghat wildlife sanctuary spread over some 400 sq km has a good tiger population. In the last census, 58 tigers were reported to be present here. The increasing biotic pressure has been a constant problem even in this part of the forest.

Meanwhile, officers denied that any of these man-mauling tigers could also be man-eaters. Though the tigers have not struck after January 11, officers have not even found any natural prey killed by tigers in the area where they have been localised.

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