PANAJI: Where have Goa's tigers gone? Despite consistently throwing up four to five tigers in past counts, the latest 2011 tiger census conspicuously avoids reference to the state and its elusive tiger. The good news, however, is that this state could once again add as many as five tigers to the national tally of 1,706.
Assistant conservator of forests wildlife and eco-tourism Kamu Prakash said that although the state forest department had completed its share of field work and sent its findings to the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) in Dehradun, the analysis confirming the findings is yet to be returned.
"The Union ministry of environment and forests had come up with a set of guidelines on how the tiger census is to be conducted, based on which we had submitted that there could be as many as five tigers in Goa," Prakash said.
"But we are yet to receive the report either confirming or refuting our findings (from the WII)," he added, saying once the report is out, the tiger count in India is likely to go up.
"The nationwide census began in November 2009, whereas here in Goa we held it only in the last week of April and the beginning of May. So we submitted our report almost six months late. Our report is expected to come in about a fortnight," Prakash said.
Suspected tiger faeces were found at Surla and Nandran within the Bhagwan Mahavir Wildlife Sanctuary at Mollem and pugmarks of a tigress and two cubs discovered along the water's edge in Anjunem dam near the Goa-Karnataka border in recent times.
"The tiger-related findings from Goa will have to be correlated with those from Karnataka to ensure we are not counting the same tiger twice," Prakash said.
Wildlife and environmental activists have long been campaigning that Goa's sanctuaries be notified as tiger reserves. They have accused the forest department of denying the presence of tigers to appease the politically and economically strong mining lobby.
Following strict directives from the ministry of environment and forests, the Goa forest department in the past has had to initiate probes into mining near the Netravali wildlife sanctuary in eastern Goa, a known tiger corridor.
The mining lobby fears that the confirmed presence of the country's most endangered animal could force a halt to their highly lucrative ore extraction operations. More than two dozen mining leases ring the sanctuary area.
Noted wildlife activist Rajendra Kerkar has said top forest officials were dithering from admitting to the presence of the tiger in Goa's forests because of pressure from the Rs.6,000- crore mining industry in Goa, which has nearly 100 open cast mining pits, most of which border the wildlife sanctuaries.
A tiger was poached in the Mhadei wildlife sanctuary, 70 km from here in 2009.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/goa/Goa-may-add-to-Indias-tiger-numbers/articleshow/8004576.cms
This blog is a humble contribution towards increasing awareness about problems being faced wrt Tiger Conservation in India. With the Tiger fast disappearing from the radar and most of us looking the other way the day is not far when the eco system that supports and nourishes us collapses. Citizen voice is an important tool that can prevent the disaster from happening and this is an attempt at channelising the voice of concerned nature lovers.
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Sunday, April 17, 2011
Ramesh praises tiger revival project in Panna - PTI
Panna (MP), Apr 16 (PTI) Union Environment and Forests Minister, Jairam Ramesh today praised the ongoing programme of tiger population revival at Panna Tiger Reserve here, and announced a grant of Rs 200 crore for tiger conservation in Madhya Pradesh. "Madhya Pradesh will get Rs 200 crore as the first instalment for the tiger conservation, and I am happy with the progress of the translocation of tigers in the the Panna Tiger Reserve," Ramesh, here to review the project, told reporters. To a question he said that MOEF would not give nod to Ken-Betwa river linking scheme, as it would affect the wildlife and ecology of the reserve. The Ministry would also not give clearance to a proposed railway line through the Reserve, Ramesh said. Panna had become completely devoid of tigers two years back. To revive the big cat population, three tigresses and a tiger were translocated here from outside. Two tigresses have already given birth to around five cubs; two of them today celebrated their birthday in the minister's presence.
http://ibnlive.in.com/generalnewsfeed/news/ramesh-praises-tiger-revival-project-in-panna/650979.html
http://ibnlive.in.com/generalnewsfeed/news/ramesh-praises-tiger-revival-project-in-panna/650979.html
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