Advertisement
Help
You are here: Rediff Home » India » News » PTI
Search:  Rediff.com The Web
  Advertisement
      Discuss  |             Email   |         Print  |  Get latest news on your desktop

110 tigers lost in last six years: govt data
Archana Jyoti in New Delhi
Related Articles
Rajasthan govt denies report on missing tigers

Only 1400 tigers left in India!

Tiger tales and strange encounters with the king of the jungle

Shocking: Indian tigers on sale online

The magnificent tigers of Ranthambore

Rs 50 cr for tiger conservation: FM

Where tigers rest in your lap

At least one tiger is killed by poachers every day

Travel: India's 10 best wildlife safaris

Get news updates:What's this?
   
  Advertisement
December 22, 2008 18:02 IST
Last Updated: December 22, 2008 18:15 IST

India's forests have lost at least 110 tigers in the past six years due to poaching and several other reasons, according to government data.

The figures made available under the RTI Act reflects that the royal predators have been unsafe not only in non-protected area but also inside reserves, given that this year alone 14 cases of tiger mortality, including four tigresses and two cubs, have been reported till November.

Of six cases of poaching, three tigers were killed last month -- one each outside Kanha and Khatiya buffer range in Madhya Pradesh [Images] and another in Dudhwa tiger reserve in Uttar Pradesh [Images], according to the data.

Similarly, as many as 30 endangered big cats died in 2007, the highest in the past five years, with 16 perishing in reserves while 14 in non-protected areas. Five big cats died in world famous Corbett Tiger reserve in Uttar Pradesh while Bandipur park in Madhya Pradesh lost two tigresses.

During the same period, 14 cases of tiger mortality were reported from outside reserves of which five of the big cats were killed in poaching and three due to poisoning. A man-eater tiger which had strayed in Chandrapur in Maharashtra's Nagpur region had to be shot dead by the forest department late last year.

"These are official figures and the actual figures may be higher," Belinda Wright, prominent wildlife expert, noted. The situation was grim in 2006 too when eight tigresses and two male striped cats died inside the reserves in various tiger-range states.


© Copyright 2008 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.
       Email  |        Print   |   Get latest news on your desktop

© 2008 Rediff.com India Limited. All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer | Feedback