Tiger deaths reach all-time high of 88
India saw a sharp increase in tiger deaths, which reached an all-time high of 88 tigers dead in 2012, according to data released by the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA).
This is the highest number of fatalities in one year, overtaking the 71 tiger deaths in 2011.
Mortality rates have been unusually high in Corbett National Park and Tadoba Tiger Reserve in Maharashtra. Overall, a large number of tiger deaths have been reported from the states of Maharashtra and Karnataka and can be attributed to increased poaching. Both Maharashtra and Karnataka recorded 14 tiger deaths each while Uttarakhand reported 12 deaths followed by Madhya Pradesh with eight deaths while 28 tigers died due to natural causes.
The last all-India tiger population estimation in 2010 had placed the number of tigers at 1,636. Wildlife conservationist Belinda Wright blames government apathy. “Wildlife crime has become a lucrative business which provides high motivation to poachers. Unfortunately, ground-level protection is not able to match the skills and ruthlessness of these tiger-poaching gangs.”
Expressing concern, tiger biologist Ullas Karanth has called for the implementation of “a solid system of monitoring of tiger populations across our states”. “The NTCA has put a Phase 4 monitoring protocol in place. While some states are following it, others are laggards. Tiger densities in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu are high but the situation in Kerala is very bad with the state coming up with exaggerated numbers, especially for Wayanad Tiger Reserve,” said Dr Karanth, adding that tiger populations have gone down in several reserves in the Maoist belt but that the big cat is thriving in parts of the Western Ghats, central India and in the Terai.
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