In just 11 weeks of '09, tiger count down by 17

   NEW DELHI: India's tiger count has dropped by at least 17 in the last 11
weeks since January 1. Poaching, poisoning, old age and infighting are the  key
reasons behind their deaths, say wildlife activists and forest officals.

The incidents have occurred all over India: from Manipur to Maharashtra to
Uttar Pradesh. But statistics provided by NGO, Wildlife Protection Society
of India, show that a majority of the deaths have taken place in Kanha Tiger
Reserve, Madhya Pradesh and Kaziranga National Park, Assam. In fact,
officers from Wildlife Crime Control
Bureau have already been dispatched to these reserves to carry out
investigations.

Two big cats were found dead in Dhela range of Corbett Tiger Reserve on
March 10 and 17 respectively. Forest officer MS Kunwar of Kalagarh says that
the second incident was a result of territorial infighting.
"Some portions of the dead tiger were eaten away by the tiger who had killed
it. The other tiger died a week ago of old age," he says.
Nonetheless, the confiscation of tiger body parts including 16 kgs of bones,
two skulls and two paws by army officials on the Myanmar border in February
and the seizure of a fresh tiger skin in Katni the month before clearly
shows that poachers continue to be active.

Belinda Wright of Wildlife Protection Society of India says tigers are being
killed because they are valued more dead, than alive. "Poachers make a lot
of money by killing a tiger and selling its parts: skin, bones, claws,
whiskers, penis and so on. Tiger parts are traded illegally, largely to feed
the demand of a market in China," she says.

Wildlife activists also feel that forest officials occasionally cover-up a
tiger's unnatural death by attributing it to a territorial fight. "There
should be total transparency as a first step when tigers are killed, instead
of the tendency to hide the problem," says carnivore biologist Advait
Edgaonkar. He believes that hiring and training more forest guards as well
as involving locals in the protection of parks would go a long way in
protecting the tiger.

The latest tiger census figures released in Jan 2008, showed a mere 1,411
tigers alive as compared to 3,508 in 1997, a drastic drop of 60%.

BOX: Tiger toll, 2009

Mar 20: Bhadrawati, Maharashtra: Forest officials nab three persons with
tiger claws and bones
Mar 17: Corbett, UP: Infighting claims one tiger at Dhela Range
Mar 10: Corbett, UP: An aged 14-year-old male tiger found dead at Dhela
Range
Mar 4: Kanha, MP: One tiger found dead near Daman village
Feb 26: Tadoba Andhari, Maharashtra: One tigress found dead
Feb 24: Faizabad, Uttar Pradesh: Man-eater tigress shot dead
Feb 16: Chandel, Manipur: Army seizes 16 kg tiger bones, two skulls and two
paws during vehicle checks near Myanmar border.
Feb 13: Kaziranga, Assam: One tiger killed in infighting
Feb 8: Pilibhit, UP: One tiger found dead near Sharda canal
Jan 31: Kanha, MP: One tiger found dead near Auraicamp
Jan 21: Kaziranga: One tigress dead of suspected poisoning
Jan 19: Katni, MP: One fresh tiger skin seized
Jan 18: Kanha, MP: One tiger found dead
Jan 10: Kaziranga, Assam: One tiger found dead
Jan 5: Kaziranga, Assam: One tigress found dead
Jan 3: Kanha, MP: Two tiger cubs found dead
Jan 3: Kaziranga, Assam: One tiger found dead
Jan 2: Bhandara, Maharashtra: One tiger found dead

(Source: Wildlife Protection Society of India)

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