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Tenth Cheetah Litter in Kuno Raises Population to 53 — But Can India’s Cheetahs Survive in the Wild?

 India’s cheetah population reaches 53 after the tenth litter in Kuno, but experts question whether births inside bomas signal real conservation success. The announcement of the tenth cheetah litter in Kuno National Park on March 9 has pushed India’s cheetah population to 53 individuals. The numbers appear impressive. Of these, 44 cheetahs are currently alive, including nine recently brought from Botswana, while 45 cubs have been born in India since the project began. Out of these births, 33 cubs are surviving and 12 have died.For a species declared extinct in India in 1952, the return of cheetah cubs is emotionally powerful. Government officials and conservation managers have understandably celebrated the milestone as proof that Project Cheetah is moving in the right direction. But is this a right perception?  Also read: 3 Years In: Unveiling the Truth About India's Cheetah Project Perhaps, No. When viewed through the lens of ecology and long-term conservation, the numbe...

Naxals Spread Terror in Kahna Tiger Reserve

Kanha tiger reserve

Crown jewel of Project Tiger, Kanha National Park is heading towards a major crisis. Left wing extremists or Naxalites have spread their operations in the  jungle spreading their tentacles inside the core zone of the tiger  reserve . In the last post, we mentioned how maoists' presence impacted Palamu tiger reserve. Recently, they killed a field frontline personnel in Kanha creating panic  from the top to bottom in the park team. As tigers watch movemet of the outlaws from a distance, they too are under threat.  Global Tiger Forum, an inter-governmental international organistion for the conservation of tiger in the wild, has sought intervention of the chief minister of Madhya Pradesh who continues to be tightlipped. 

Tiger Hotspot In Red Corridor 

Kahna Tiger Reserve

This is bad news for Kanha, a globally acclaimed tigerhotspot and also a setback to all the wildlife lovers. Kanha national park was created on  June 1,1955 and was designated as a tiger reserve in 1973 under Project Tiger. One of the biggest tiger reserves of the country, it is spread over an area of  940  square km in the two districts Mandla and Balaghat. Together with a surrounding buffer zone of 1,067 sq km and the neighbouring 110 square km Phen Sanctuary, it forms the Kanha tiger reserve,the largest national park in central India. Besides housing over 70 tigers, the park also hosts leopards, sloth bear, barasingha, spotted deer, sambhar and dhole(wild dogs) among other species of wildlife.  The lowland forst in Kanha is a mixture of sal (Shorea robusta) and other mixed-forest trees, interspersed with meadows. The highland forests are tropical moist, dry deciduous type and of a completely different nature from bamboo (Dendrocalamus strictus) on slope.

A very popular wildlife destination world over,Kanha is now also an important point in the red corridor of the Maoists. About four years ago, they started operations in Kanha  from Balaghat  district which they were also using as a transit point to cross over from naxal infested Chattisgarh to Mahatashtra,police sources said.  From the revenue area in Baihar sub -division of Balaghat district , they entered the tiger reserve , first in Mukki  range and then  spread to other parts. They have increased their area of operation in Balaghat and the parts of the park  in Mandla  bordering  Balaghat , forest department  sources admitted.  In fact, a " major part" of the tiger reserve is in their grip. The top political leadership of the state and the country are “ very well aware” of the crisis but so far  no action has been initiated. Operations must be carry out to immediately flush out the outlaws.

Global Tiger Forum Seeks Action

Kahna Tiger Reserve

The Global Tiger Forum is working with all the 13 countriesin the world where tigers are found. It has expressed concern over the development. Its secretary general Rajesh Gopal, who was also director of Kanha and additional director general of Project Tiger, recommends a task force comprising the officialsof forest department, police and revenue department with the chief minister asthe chairman. He said that the situation calls for looking beyond Kanha at a landscapescale with a portfolio of sectoral  integrationinvolving several stakeholder departments , to support community stewardship.

Also ReadRailways' Push For Tracks in Tiger Reserves Contradicts its Green Claims

The effort also needs to be complemented by putting into the  use of state of the art technology  to step up the surveillance situated intelligent camera on a 24X7 basis to monitor untoward movement of the  miscreants. Thus, the activity portfolio needsto have both policing as well as community oriented elements based on landscape level master plan, the GTF secretary general said. Khageshwer Nayak, a former park director of the tiger reserve and member of the state wildlife board in Madhya Pradesh where Kanha is situated, has sought “action by the security forces.”  

Insurgents Issues Threat 

Kahna Tiger Reserve

Meanwhile,the maoists have started issuing threats in Kanha. They have “appealed”to the forest rangers to stop using “ GPS in their mobile phone” while trackingthe forest and patrolling their range. In fact they  want  the forest rangers not to use “ MSTriIPES,  a software monitoring system for tigers’ intensiveprotection  and ecological status. 

Also read: Deadly Train Tracks Threaten Tiger Corridor In MP    

The extremists feel that the software would reveal their location also. The rangers are concerned for their life and this would impact the tiger monitoring. Naxalites targeted many jungles of India in the states of Bihar, Jharkhand, Chattisgarh ,Odisha, Andhra Pradesh and Telengana.They use thick forests as hideouts. After a similar presence and later consolidating their situation,  there are hardly any forest or tiger management programmes taking place in Palamu national park  in Jharkhand and Indrawati  national park in Chattisgarh.

Representational Image :Rajiv Sharma. 

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