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In Tiger Pugmarks, A Blueprint For Conservation

The good news isn’t just 3,000 tigers, but the fact that tigers are still able to make their way to areas that can hold them.

A tiger rests under a rock in Pench Tiger Reserve, Seoni, Madhya Pradesh. (Photographer: Arijit Ghosh/Bloomberg)
A tiger rests under a rock in Pench Tiger Reserve, Seoni, Madhya Pradesh. (Photographer: Arijit Ghosh/Bloomberg)

Some good news is tailing the tigers of India.

Surmounting large roads, tropical storms, vehicular traffic, houses, pits, fences, and fields, tigers have claimed new territory. On July 29, international tiger day, the Government of India released the full report on tiger status in India. We have close to 3,000 tigers, which is most of the world’s wild tiger population.

A close look at the report shows huge discrepancies between Indian tiger reserves – while areas like Corbett, Kaziranga, Kanha have high tiger density, at least 25 reserves have low density. But two areas newly claimed by tigers show that we have reason to cheer – and cause also to safeguard corridors between tiger reserves.

A male tiger in Pench, Madhya Pradesh. (Photographer: Neha Sinha)
A male tiger in Pench, Madhya Pradesh. (Photographer: Neha Sinha)

A tiger from the Sahyadri tiger reserve in Maharashtra has traveled more than 200 kilometres to settle itself in the Kali tiger reserve in Karnataka. All tigers have different stripe patterns. While the difference in faces is discernible, images from camera traps—hidden cameras that take images of animals that move in front of the device—have positively identified the Kali tiger to be the same as the one from Sahyadri. And camera trap images from Assam show that tigers have moved to newer areas that haven’t seen stripes for a long time. Camera trap images reveal that four tigers settling in Laokhowa Burhachapori wildlife sanctuary—which lies on the buffer of Kaziranga national park—have gone there from Kaziranga.

Park authorities say this is the result of more than fifteen years of work in the Kaziranga landscape, which is lashed by floods each year and is in the grip of chronic poaching. The Kaziranga tigers expanding their range means more viability for the tiger population.

Though India’s tiger numbers have been stable for some time, it is only inter-connections between the reserves that can increase numbers and the fitness of tigers.
A tiger walks through Pench tiger reserve in Maharashtra, part of one of India’s oldest tiger landscapes which lies across states of Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. (Photographer: Neha Sinha)
A tiger walks through Pench tiger reserve in Maharashtra, part of one of India’s oldest tiger landscapes which lies across states of Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. (Photographer: Neha Sinha)

Tigers have very specific sociology. Unlike lions, they are solitary animals. If we were to use the ‘king of the jungle’ moniker, a tiger would be the right contender, for a life that is hard-won till the end. Tigresses raise cubs alone. They may die defending them from unknown male tigers. Males and females establish their own territories, which they guard. A male tiger will have larger territories than females – between 50-100 square kilometres.

Most tiger sightings in reserves happen because tigers are out patrolling their territory, and they may appear along the same places as they march on their areas. This means that there is a limit to how many tigers an area can hold. It also means that young tigers, after weaning from their mothers, have to disperse far distances to establish their own territory. This is a fledgling from the nest, which could soon be in the jaws of another tiger or getting knocked down on highways and railways. In 2010, a male tiger from Ranthambhore, in search of territory, walking hundreds of kilometres. It went first to Mathura, walking along fields and highways. Not finding forest cover there, it finally settled in Keoladeo bird sanctuary. It was later caught and taken to Sariska.

A waterhole in the Pench Tiger Reserve, Seoni, Madhya Pradesh. (Photographer: Shalini Ghosh/Bloomberg)
A waterhole in the Pench Tiger Reserve, Seoni, Madhya Pradesh. (Photographer: Shalini Ghosh/Bloomberg)

A close look at the new tiger estimation report shows that almost half of India’s fifty tiger reserves have low tiger density. On one hand, reserves like Corbett, Kaziranga, and Nagarhole have between 10-14 tigers per 100 square kilometres. But reserves like Kali, Achanakmar, Bor, and others have one tiger per 100 square kilometres.

The states of Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, and Odisha are doing badly despite having tiger reserves, and in spite of receiving tigers from central Indian highlands.

Strengthening corridors and restoring tiger reserves here will be crucial. This becomes even more important because the report indicates we are both losing forests as well as gaining areas with tigers in them – that is, tigers are colonising new areas even as we lose forest cover.

In Tiger Pugmarks, A Blueprint For Conservation

Practically, it is unlikely India will form many more tiger reserves. But optimising the ones we have can only happen by preserving and restoring wilderness corridors. Genetic studies show that the more tiger populations intermingle, the greater their genetic diversity is. Forests that are cut off from other wildernesses have isolated populations (such as Sariska tiger reserve) which could lead to genetic depression.

Happily, the Sahyadri tiger walking to Kali—an area with very low tiger density—shows that natural corridors still exist in the Western Ghats. In Assam, the four tigers in Laokhowa demonstrate that we could have a much larger tiger area, between the reserves of Orang and Kaziranga, the hills of Karbi-Anglong and the Laokhowa sanctuary. The good news isn’t just 3,000 tigers, but the fact that tigers are still able to make their way to areas that can hold them.

A female tiger in Ranthambhore, Rajasthan. (Photographer: Neha Sinha)
A female tiger in Ranthambhore, Rajasthan. (Photographer: Neha Sinha)

Consider corridors as a living map, one that exists in negotiation with large infrastructure, and the prospect of disasters like floods. In several instances, these corridors are fringe forests, degraded sanctuaries, riverbeds, fields, reserve forests, and streams. They are used by many other wild animals for cover or feeding. New railway lines or roads need to avoid these areas. The tiger estimation gives a sense of the corridors the animals are using. This should be a blueprint for avoiding new highways and railways.

India is crucial for the wild tigers of the world. But as we celebrate tiger numbers, it is important to remember that numbers are not everything. At the end of the day, we don’t just want safari parks where you can see one tiger for the album. That one tiger spotted often is from a handful of individuals in the tourism zone. What we really need is to ensure tigers have a vibrant gene pool, and can inherit living forest corridors.

The tigers are, in fact, showing us that following in their pugmarks would mean a blueprint for positive conservation action – in the forests and grasslands that remain in the world.

Neha Sinha works with the Bombay Natural History Society. Views expressed are personal.

The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of BloombergQuint or its editorial team.