Showing posts with label Man-Animal conflicts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Man-Animal conflicts. Show all posts

Monday, June 14, 2010

Radio-collared Sundarban Tiger moves into Bangladesh

A radio-collared Tiger in the Sundarbans has reportedly crossed over into Bangladesh, forest officials have found. A radio collar worth around Rs 6-7 lakh was placed around the neck of the Tiger on May 21.

“This once again confirms that wild animals do not understand political boundaries and often move across the international border,” said Sundarban Biosphere Reserve (SBR) director Pradip Vyas. Significantly, 60% of the Sundarbans falls in Bangladesh while 40% is in India.

Sources said this is one of the reasons why Union Environment and Forests minister Jairam Ramesh has taken up the India-Bangladesh joint initiative on the Sundarbans. Tiger conservation has to be done jointly, said senior forest officials. Interestingly, the forest officials are still receiving signals from the collar and have located it somewhere in the middle of Talpatty island in Bangladesh.

The Tiger had entered into Malmelia village in North 24-Parganas and was eventually trapped in the Arbeshi jungle on May 21. It was tranquillized and radio-collared before being released in the Katuajhuri forest of the Sundarbans. The radio collar signals revealed that on the first two days, it traveled only 6-7 km. But on the third day, the Tiger traveled more than double that distance.

The signals show that a Tiger crosses its command area and moves into new territory at will, even if there is enough prey. The forest department found that there was enough prey in the Katuajhuri jungle and forest guards, who examined the terrain, found carcasses of animals devoured by the Tiger. “So, we were a bit surprised when the Tiger suddenly started moving from south to east, towards Bangladesh. This hints that a Tiger can enter due to reasons other than the lack of prey base,” an official reports.

The Tiger started closing in on Talpatty. Finally, two days ago, it moved into the Bangladesh Sundarbans.

The officials are keeping a close watch on the movements of the Tiger with the help of signals from the collar. In recent times, a Tiger and a Tigress, which had entered into Shamsernagar, were also found to have entered Indian territory from Bangladesh.

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Client.asp?Daily=TOIKM&showST=true&login=default&pub=TOI&Enter=true&Skin=TOINEW&GZ=T

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Young female Tiger rescued & released back into the wild in Sundarbans


Sundarban experienced a low density cyclonic weather on the evening of Monday 26.04.2010. A young Tigress probably misguided by the strong wind & turbulent river entered the Adibashipara village in the Bagna Range & was spotted by a villager.

Prompt initiative by the villagers drived the animal into an abandoned hut where she was safe till the Range Officer Debraj Sur along with the Sundarban Tiger Reserve team intercepted. Soon the Tigress was successfully tranquilized by Beat Officer Ayan Chakraborty. Disturbed by human presence the poor animal seemed to be quite nervous. She was kept under observation of the Tiger Reserve's official vet and was fed with dressed chicken, which is common in such cases.

At 06.38 hrs today she was released at Khatuajhuri forest area in the same range. The Tigress apparently had no major injury marks or any such abnormalities when we saw her just before she went back into the wild.

We sincerely thank the villagers of Adibashipara for the cooperation that they have extended to the forest staff for a speedy rescue operation. The STR team deserves a salute for such a successful, smooth & prompt rescue operation.

Our BTL-Sanctuary Bengal Tiger Bachaao campaign in the Sundarbans had organised "Walk for the Tigers" at this village area last November to spread awareness on such issues seeking the villagers' involvement in rescuing such Tigers safely. We had also conducted immediate & intensive relief operations with the help of Wildlife Conservation Trust in this area last May 3 days post cyclone Aila through the Tiger Reserve team.



Thursday, April 22, 2010

Radio-collars on Sundarban Tigers stop functioning.

A report from the Field Director of Sundarban Tiger Reserve late last night says --
The department has retrieved radio-collar from the forest floor at around 13:45 hrs off the Dhonakhali. This is the collar that was fitted on a Tiger that had entered a village on February 22nd & was rescued. This Tiger was release in the presence of senior forest officials & WII experts, the report adds. At this moment both collars fitted to 2 Tigers remain non functional as the other collar (no.7224) too that was on a male is not giving any signals for the past 10 days now. The report claims that this male was physically sighted with the collar on 18th April night. This particular collar (no.7224) was previously fitted on a Tigress & had fell off from her and retrieved later by the dept. The report now claims to evaluate quality of such collars & its efficacy in the Sundarbans.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

TIGER GRAVEYARDS OF RANTHAMBHORE

by Bahar Dutt // CNN-IBN

Away from the glitzy media campaigns that are running in our big cities to save the tiger, at Ground Zero it's a competition between man and animal or sometimes - perhaps animal and animal. Domestic vs wild. And the recent incident of poisoning of the tiger cubs in Ranthambore is a prime example of this conflict. Less than 10 days after the incident I make my way to the tiger graveyards to find out what was it that drove local people to poison the big cats.

The two tiger cubs were killed by men from the Gujjar community from a nearby village of Tadla Khet. Reason: the tigers had been repeatedly attacking the goats around their village. It's not easy reaching the site of Tadla Khet. It's far from the tourist zone of Ranthambore National Park. The area is actually a corridor linking the National Park with Kailedevi Sanctuary. It's dotted by ravines and a dry river bed. The only village nearby is Tadla Khet which is a small hamlet of 5 houses.

In the backdrop we can see the plateau of the Kailedevi Sanctuary - oft neglected but with a landscape which is more breathtaking at times than its high-profile neighbour- Ranthambore. We snake our way through the dusty ravines in an open jeep that kicks up sand in the blistering overhead sun. The smell of death is still in the air at the tiger graveyard. There are still some shreds of hair next to a bush, the yellow and black indicating it belonged to the dead tigers. Ahead on the right is a patch of grey ash - where the tiger carcasses were burnt by the forest department after the post-mortem confirmed poisoning as a cause of death.

But the story of the dead tigers lies in the nearby village. We leave our jeep and walk through the ravines. It's a ten-minute walk but with the sun beating down on us and carrying our camera equipment it's a tedious exercise. The village has the look of a ghost town. Every house has a lock, no animals no human life or property can be seen. It's all been abandoned.

In one house we do manage to find an old man asleep on a charpoy with a couple of house sparrows twittering at his feet for company. He shuffles his feet he is scared to talk to us, worrying we maybe from the forest department. Once he has lit his bidi and he's satisfied we are not from the department he talks. It was his son who was arrested - Ram Khiladi. He spits on the ground clears his throat and raises his thin brown arms in the air - I told them (the forest department) to arrest me as well but they said baba - what will you do with me' I said - 'Make pickle out of me but leave my son alone'

So what prompted the Gujjars here to plan the murder of the tigers in so much detail? Was there no fear that they would be caught? And why had the tiger cubs strayed out of the forest? These are the questions in my head as we walk around the abandoned village.

It's also obvious that while this area seems like complete wilderness - and therefore a good habitat for the tigers, there's no food or natural prey base. So obvious then, that the tigers had turned to killing the local peoples cattle to feed themselves. But why did the big cats stray out of the forest where there is an ample prey base?

Officials in the park claim that they had been pushed out because of competition for space. And there you have it -- that's the crux of our problem when it comes to saving tigers. The issue of space. Ranthambore today is a habitat that is saturated. And the surrounding regions of Kailadevi and Sawai Mansingh Sanctuary are devoid of the big cat. So if the tigers are to colonies new areas it's the corridors linking these vital habitats that must be freed.

While there is a massive effort on to move people out of the tiger reserve to create a larger habitat for the tiger, it's a lengthy and complicated procedure. The good news is that it is being initiated in a sensitive manner with no forced evictions. The National Tiger Conservation Authority, for the first time, has announced a massive incentive of Rs 10 lakh for individuals living inside tiger reserves to move out. So only those people who want to move have to move. The bad news is that the second clause of the rehabilitation package is still not being implemented. And that's the clause of 'land for land'. And this essentially means compensating local farmers with the same quantity of land outside the forest as they had inside.

Take the village of Hindwar in Ranthambore. The sarpanch here has convinced the entire village to move out. It's right next to the main road, every person here stays in Delhi or Jaipur. But now with the Rs 10-lakh compensation many are coming back to stake their claims and move out. But will vacating a village which is right on the road be of any ecological benefits?

Then there are others who have simply refused to move. In the village of Bhind I meet Murari Gujjar. He has refused Rs 10-lakh compensation as he has 50 bighas of land. The amount is too less. He twirls his white moustache as he smokes his hookah. 'I will move out only if the forest department gives me land for land -10 lakhs is too small an amount'. Murari Lal did not succumb to the greed of easy money. He realizes there is more security with getting land instead of cash. Here in the forest he has ample land to plant his crops and graze his cattle. Its people like him the forest department will have to convince. The tragedy is with all the funds being pumped in only half the village will be vacated- which mean it's still not available for the Park or for wild animals.

Murari Gujjar is also sensitive to the other problems that come with money. Suddenly there are flashy motorbikes in the village. Many have already spent the cash they got on paying off their debts. But will that give them long term security such as a house or land when they move out this month out of the forest? What surprises me is that the entire process of relocation which is fraught with social problems is not being monitored by even one social agency. Over the ages a policing department like the forest department has been asked to take over many social roles. Is this fair to assign this task to an already overburdened department? I am not too sure.

Back in the tourist zone of Ranthambore, we are lucky to spot a tiger. It's a female and she stares at us calmly and dozes off as trigger-happy tourists surround her on their jeeps to click photos. There's cheer on their faces of the hundreds of tourists who have come from far off destinations to see the tiger. In the distance a langur gives out an alarm call and a wily mongoose scurries past. The peace in the forest is ephemeral.


Monday, March 29, 2010

Tiger-human conflict at Assam

Tiger strays into Assam tea garden, kills two

TIMES NEWS NETWORK


Jorhat: A Royal Bengal tiger triggered panic and anger on Monday after it strayed into a tea garden settlement in Sivasagar district and attacked as many as four persons, two of whom died.
At 5.30 am, the big cat entered the Athkhel tea garden in the Sivasagar forest range and attacked Manglu Mirdha and his 12-year-old daughter Rita. While the girl died on the spot, her father was badly wounded, said assistant conservator of forests (Sivasagar) Ranjit Das.
Hearing Rita’s screams, one of her neighbours, Saraswati Southal (31), stepped out of her house only to be attacked by the adult tiger. Saraswati succumbed to her injuries while being taken to Assam Medical College (AMC), Dibrugarh.
Later, the animal attacked two others — Karuna Tanti (50) and Uma Mattu Southal (26). Both have been admitted to AMC. Their condition is serious.
As the news spread, more than 2,000 people armed with spears, bows and sticks rushed to the site to battle the big cat. Senior district officials rushed to the area along with a large contingent of policemen to control the situation and help forest personnel tranquillise the animal.
Veterinarian Prasanta Bora and Prabhat Hazarika (dart-shooter) from the Centre of Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation managed to sedate the tiger and cage it after toiling for nearly six hours as they couldn’t see the animal well, which had taken shelter in the dark corner of a house.
The assistant conservator of forests said police and forest staff had a tough time controlling the angry residents, who were baying for the animal’s blood. He added that the tiger might have got panicky and entered the house to escape the wrath of the villagers.
Sivasagar deputy commissioner N M Hussain said it was “a very unexpected incident” because there had been no reports of a Royal Bengal tiger being spotted in the region. There have, however, been instances of leopards straying into human settlements here.
“The situation in the area was very tense after the tiger attacked residents. We had a tough time containing the people,” Hussain said.
After six shots, the tiger became unconscious and was caged. The animal was taken to a nearby police camp and would be sent to the Centre for Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation at night, the official said.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Tadoba’s Bloody Trails

MAN-ANIMAL CONFLICT : LOSS AT BOTH ENDS

Tigers have killed more than 50 people around the Tadoba Andhari reserve since 2006. Why is Maharashtra’s Chandrapur district turning into India’s bloodiest tiger conflict zone?

But for her husband, Kamala Chandok Kudape would have been devoured by a Tiger. Her eyes still darting to and fro, she tells the story she has been repeating since 18 January when she went into the fringe forests of the Tadoba Andhari reserve to collect firewood.

Kamala’s husband had climbed a tree and she was picking up twigs below when a Tiger leapt from behind. Before she could realise what was on, the animal’s claws were tearing into her flesh. Then, the unthinkable happened. Her husband jumped off the tree and the Tiger fled, leaving Kamala bleeding from a deep shoulder injury.

But that is not the story.

For more than four years now, one person dies in Tiger attacks around Tadoba every month—a frequency of conflict higher than any recorded anywhere, except the Bangladeshi Sunderbans, in recent times.

Part of the erstwhile Gondwana forests, Tadoba has been home to Tigers for ages, with no history of major conflict. Data available since 1992 shows only eight human deaths due to Tiger attacks in five years till 1996. Early signs of escalation in conflict were reported in 2002. By 2006, human casualties became routine; in 2007, a suspected maneater was killed after public outrage. After a brief lull, however, the attacks continued. In the last three months, Tigers have targeted nine people here, killing seven.

Nawargaon is at the centre of a 50-km north-south strip—from Chimur to Mul—along the eastern boundary of Taboba that has suffered the recent spate in attacks. The fringe forests hemming in roads and croplands are surprisingly thick for the dry winter. The bushy growth of Sindi, Dhaora or Papat offer excellent camouflage. Tigers could be lurking around, anywhere.

Kamala’s is the first hutment as one walks into Alisur village, barely 50 metres from the road connecting Nawargaon to Chimur. The spot where she was attacked is a couple of kilometres down the blacktop road, and then, not more than 100 metres inside the bushy growth. I could clearly hear the traffic and people on the road as I stood under the tree. The Tiger must have been fearless enough to target her so close to civilisation.

Or was it? For, the fact that she survived with an injury clearly indicates that Kamala was targeted by a rather edgy and inexperienced predator.

Kamala was the fourth victim in the latest series of nine attacks. The first incident happened on 19 December near Keorapet village. Forty-year-old Sharda was eaten up when she went to the forest to collect firewood. Tigers usually do not look to hunt for about a week after feeding on a kill. The next attack was reported on 26 December, near Mane Mohadi village.

The second victim escaped the attack and the Tiger remained hungry. Within two days, the third attack was reported at Seoni. But the tiger could not feed on the kill as villagers entered the forest soon enough to recover the body. The predator probably soon managed to make an animal kill, as peace prevailed for the next three weeks. Then, it singled Kamala out without realising that her brave husband was up there on the tree.

When the Tiger struck again on 4 February, it appeared really desperate. Three women were killed on three consecutive days within a stretch of 14 kilometres at Pedgaon, Jamsala and Singadzari. It was at Singadzari that people got a fleeting glimpse of the Tiger near the kill.

The animal appeared to be a young male.

In all three cases, the villagers recovered the bodies, leaving the Tiger hungry. Two days later, a man was reported killed 40 kilometres from Jamsala near Chimur. This time, the Tiger had eaten some of its kill. Many were sceptical if it was the same Tiger at work in Chimur, as the next attack was reported on 16 February near Jamsala again. But it is not impossible for a Tiger to make two kills within six days 40 kilometres apart.

Were the attacks accidental? Unlikely, since each time, the carcass was dragged away from the spot of the kill and consumed on two occasions that the predator was not immediately disturbed by a search team. But the Tiger attacked victims only once they entered forest patches. If the animal was stalking people for easy prey, what stopped it from entering villages?

By all signs, this was confusing Tiger behaviour. So what has changed around Tadoba over the last decade to trigger such conflict?

In terms of land use, not much. Chandrapur district has been a hub of coal mining for decades, and the southern fringes of Tadoba were always subject to disturbances with a number of opencast mines in operation. No new factory or dam has come up in the last decade either.

Y Yadav, conservator of forests, Chandrapur Division, maintained that some degree of conflict was inevitable with so many Tigers and people around, and that the recent escalation was on account of rising Tiger numbers.

A 625-sq km reserve, Tadoba claims to have 50 Tigers. Another 20 roam the fringe forests. But then, Tadoba had reported more than 40 Tigers even ten years ago. Besides, Sanjay Thakre, conservator of forests, Tadoba Andhari Tiger reserve, pointed out that there was no dramatic increase of recency in the number of Tigers.

On the other hand, could it be possible that the villages surrounding Tadoba experienced a spurt in population? Water scarcity doesn’t allow more than one crop here. Villagers must enter the forest to collect firewood and bamboo to support themselves during the lean seasons. In every village around Tadoba, virtually every household depends on bamboo work.

At Seoni, village elders said at least 100 villagers enter the forest everyday and that the numbers had nearly doubled over a decade. Probed further, they explained that many families from other villages had locally migrated to villages like Seoni, which were at zero distance from the forest, so that they could collect bamboo easily.

Nobody has any definite figures for these settlers, but some villagers counted their new neighbours as one-fifth of the population. What is more, these settlers own little land and survive solely on bamboo extraction.

The maths can get scary. Nearly 10,000 families live in 60 villages around Tadoba. Each family makes about Rs 30 daily—the price of a bamboo mat—from this cottage industry, extracting at least four bamboos for every mat. Most of this massive extraction is illegal and goes on unchecked, thinning the mixed bamboo forests.

The story goes back to 1986 when a truckload of bamboo products was intercepted by the forest department. This triggered a prolonged legal battle which reached the Supreme Court in 1997. The apex court upheld the Bombay High Court’s 1996 order that no transit pass was required for bamboo products.

So in 1998, the forest department lifted the bar on transporting bamboo products, though the source of the bamboo would still require verification. Gradually, however, the local forest authorities came around to doing away with even the no-objection certificate for legal bamboo.

Villagers now enter the forests in thousands and spend long hours cutting down the bamboo to thin strips which are then carried out of the forests openly. And a tiger attack, unless reported nearby, is not enough reason for them to worry.

Harshwardhan Dhanwatey, whose NGO Tract has been working closely with the forest department since 2006, finds no justification in blaming Tigers. With thousands of people inside the forests, reasoned Dhanwatey, many more attacks would surely have been reported were Tigers not reclusive by nature, avoiding people.

But more than 50 deaths—few of them accidental—in four years also indicate that not all Tadoba Tigers have been behaving naturally. Here’s why.

In the past year, five Tadoba Tigresses have disappeared—feared poached. Their cubs either died or were rescued to captivity. Thakre did not rule out the possibility that more cub-rearing Tigresses of Tadoba may have been poached. Without proper grooming, orphaned young Tigers lack hunting skills and often target easy prey. Incidentally, the ‘maneater of Talodi’ shot dead in 2007 was a young male. As is the Seoni Tiger believed to be behind the recent attacks.

Poaching apart, a young male Tiger could be forced to leave his mother prematurely because of the presence of a dominant male nearby. Official data revealed that a Tigress with a sub-adult male cub was roaming the peripheral forests of the Kolsa range adjoining the conflict zone. The cub has not been spotted in the reserve for some time. The monitoring records, however, showed the presence of a big male in the area.

Could this runaway sub-adult male be behind these attacks? The bosses of the two adjoining forest managements—Tadoba and Chandrapur—have little coordination and no definite answers.

Unsurprisingly, the department’s response to sustained conflict has been ad hoc. When public anger boils over, officials place a few trap-cages or order the shooting of the supposed maneater. But it is almost impossible to identify a maneater unless found at a human kill. It is a matter of chance before an innocent Tiger pays the price for the department’s arbitrary methods.

The lack of a scientific strategy was evident when a leopard was trapped on 2 March in one of the cages meant for Tigers. Instead of immediately releasing the accidentally trapped animal, the authorities kept the leopard captive for two days. Then they transported the stressed-out animal 30 kilometres to the other side of the reserve and released it in territory unfamiliar to it.

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Poaching, orphaned cubs, habitat loss, too many people inside forests, sustained conflict and no scientific mitigation strategy complete the recipe for disaster at Tadoba. But it is possible to turn the tide by ensuring a few fundamentals.

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Land Use: Tadoba cannot afford to become an island. The 1,150 sq km buffer area has to be notified at the earliest so that mining activities do not eat into the corridor to Junona forests in the south. The proposed Human Dam Project would be a death blow as it will sever the reserve’s only connection to the central Indian forest landscape through Brahmapuri and Nagzira forests. These corridors are absolutely vital for Tadoba’s far-roaming Tigers that will otherwise crowd the fringes and exacerbate conflict.

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Management: The five villages still inside the reserve have to be relocated so that a larger inviolate area can accommodate more Tigers. The reserve requires more ground staff. The present size of beats—an average of 1,800 hectare—makes effective monitoring impossible.

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Protection: There is virtually no monitoring outside the reserve. Dhanwatey’s team has been involved in a corridor conservation programme in three ranges, regularly monitoring big cat movements with forest staff since 2008. Conflict has come down in those parts. Monitoring is also key to curbing poaching, ensuring fewer problem Tigers, and lowering chances of conflict.

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Livelihood: A thorough demographic study of the 60 villages around Tadoba is needed to evaluate local migration and livelihood issues. The villagers will only be too happy to give up collecting firewood in the forests if given subsidised fuel. Attempts to regulate bamboo extraction, however, will invite stiff resistance.

With around 10,000 families each making about Rs 30 daily, the local bamboo industry is worth well over Rs 1 crore. With the Centre releasing hundreds of crore to resettle villages, a couple of crore will be well spent on an alternative livelihood project around Tadoba to ease pressure on the forest.

Article courtesy_JAY MAZOOMDAAR, NAWARGAON

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