Jaipur, April 24 (IANS) Following reports of wild animals being injured in accidents, a complete ban has been clamped on the plying of private vehicles at the Sariska Tiger Reserve in Rajasthan's Alwar district, an official said Sunday.
Tourists will now be able to travel only in vehicles approved by the forest department authorities.
"Recently, some cases were reported wherein the reserve staff found that some wild animals were injured. It came up that private vehicles had been involved in those incidents," the official told IANS.
"In a meeting of park officials, it was decided to ban the private vehicles. It came into effect April 20," the official added.
The tiger reserve is spread in an area of around 800 sq km and is located some 110 km from here.
Many tourists were caught unawares about the ban. "I was completely unaware that such a decision has been taken. The park authorities should have properly advertised about the ban," said Mohan Pandey, who had travelled all the way from Delhi to see the reserve.
However, animal rights activists are a happy lot.
"Private vehicles were not only injuring animals but also affecting the environment," said Babu Lal Jajoo, an animal rights activist.
Besides tigers that were relocated to the reserve from Ranthambore National Park, the sanctuary is also home to panthers, jungle cats, hyenas, jackals, chitals, sambars, caracals, langurs, wild boars, four-horned deer and several species of birds.
Relocation of tigers has come as a boon for the reserve.
The tiger reserve, which had lost its sheen because of the complete disappearance of tigers, has once again started to attract tourists.
A March 2005 report by the Wildlife Institute of India confirmed that there were indeed no tigers left in Sariska Tiger Reserve. Poaching was found to be the chief reason behind the dwindling tiger population.
Facing flak from different quarters, the state government decided to relocate tigers from Ranthambore National Park in Rajasthan's Sawai Madhopur district to Sariska.
Since 2008, the reserve has been witnessing a rush from weekend tourists, especially from Delhi and the National capital region.
The Sariska Tiger Reserve, originally a hunting preserve of the erstwhile Alwar state, was declared a wildlife reserve in 1955. In 1978, it was declared a tiger reserve.
http://mangalorean.com/news.php?newstype=local&newsid=234562
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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Monday, April 25, 2011
WWI team in Sariska to change male tiger's collar TNN
JAIPUR: A Wildlife Institute of India (WII), Dehradun, team is currently at the Sariska national park. It will try to change the VHS radio collar of male tiger ST-4 that has become defunct for quite some time.
According to forest department officials, "A two-member team from the WII has been in the park for some time. They will try to tranquillise the male tiger in a day or two. We are changing the radio collar of ST-4. It has been defunct for quite some time and we are not receiving signals from it," they said.
Initially, the plans were to replace the collar of tigress ST-2 that has not been working well, but officials said it has now started functioning and will not be replaced immediately.
"In case of ST-2 we will also have to be more careful and there are chances of the tigress being pregnant and in that case tranquillising it will not advisable," officials said.
However, what remains intriguing is lack of effort of the department in introducing satellite collars for tigers. Satellite collars send constant signals no matter where the tigers are as against VHS collars that often stop signals when tigers stray far go into valleys. However, the cost of satellite collars are more than VHS ones.
Union minister for forest and environment Jairam Ramesh, during one of his visit to Sariska after the death of male tiger ST-1, had also suggested use of satellite collars despite their costs. He had even instructed Rajesh Gopal, director, National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA), but the move seems to have no takers.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/jaipur/WWI-team-in-Sariska-to-change-male-tigers-collar/articleshow/8075938.cms
According to forest department officials, "A two-member team from the WII has been in the park for some time. They will try to tranquillise the male tiger in a day or two. We are changing the radio collar of ST-4. It has been defunct for quite some time and we are not receiving signals from it," they said.
Initially, the plans were to replace the collar of tigress ST-2 that has not been working well, but officials said it has now started functioning and will not be replaced immediately.
"In case of ST-2 we will also have to be more careful and there are chances of the tigress being pregnant and in that case tranquillising it will not advisable," officials said.
However, what remains intriguing is lack of effort of the department in introducing satellite collars for tigers. Satellite collars send constant signals no matter where the tigers are as against VHS collars that often stop signals when tigers stray far go into valleys. However, the cost of satellite collars are more than VHS ones.
Union minister for forest and environment Jairam Ramesh, during one of his visit to Sariska after the death of male tiger ST-1, had also suggested use of satellite collars despite their costs. He had even instructed Rajesh Gopal, director, National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA), but the move seems to have no takers.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/jaipur/WWI-team-in-Sariska-to-change-male-tigers-collar/articleshow/8075938.cms
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