LUCKNOW: All is certainly not well with the big cats, as 15 tigers have died in less than two months this year. According to Project Tiger officials, the number of deaths is much higher as compared to the previous year. Most of the deaths have been termed as natural.
In 2010, 55 tiger deaths were reported (38 mortalities and 17 seizures) from across the country.
The consolation for Uttar Pradesh is that of the 15 deaths, none have been reported from the state.
Out of the 17 tiger states, deaths have been reported from nine. According to the MoEF, Uttarakhand has topped the chart with four tiger deaths reported between January 5 and February 19 this year. Three deaths took place in Corbett Tiger Reserve and one in West Terai Forest Division.
Kerala, Maharashtra and TN have reported two tiger deaths each, while one tiger died in Orissa, Karnataka, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Assam. Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh, Jharkhand, Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram and West Bengal did not report any tiger death.
As per the data of tiger mortalities and seizures in 2011 obtained from the ministry of environment and forest, seven deaths were reported each in January and February, a tiger skin was also seized from Chandrapur in Maharashtra in January.
When contacted, SP Yadav, deputy IG, Project Tiger, said, "Most of the deaths are natural. But, this does not mean that crime against the big cats has gone down. The average age of tigers in the wild is anywhere close to 10 years and it is natural that they die after a certain age,'' he said.
Wildlife experts, however, said it was difficult to say how many deaths are natural. Even if a tiger is poisoned it is difficult to establish it. If the carcass is found after a gap of few days poisoning is mostly not established in autopsy report.
It is only within few hours of the death that poisoning as a cause of death can be established in the report. For this reason, in many cases the exact cause of death could not be established. Even the post-mortem reports could be inconclusive.
As per the Wildlife Protection Society of India (WPSI), an agency which works with the state forest departments and enforcement agencies, out of the 15 tiger deaths in 2011, there has been one case of seizure, two suspected cases of poisoning, four cases of natural deaths and one case of shooting down of a tiger by the forest department.
In addition to this, four cases of infighting, one case of leopard-tiger clash in which both died, a case of a tiger being killed by an elephant and one case of tiger carcass being recovered (reason of death not known), were cited by the WPSI.
"We collect information through our own workers, from forest and police officers,'' said Tito Joseph, programme manager, WPSI. MoEF's database is recent but WPSI has been compiling data for several years.
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