Tiger Census of 2022: Basics Explained
India 2006 has been conducting a tiger census every four years. The number of tigers has increased from 1,411 in 2006 to 3,167 in 2022. India is home for 75% of the wild tigers in the world.
The National Tiger Conservation Authority, which conducts the estimation, has not released state or tiger reserve-wise estimates but has provided some state-specific insights in its report
The report said that tiger populations have also declined in Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, even though tigers have been spotted for the first time in Himachal Pradesh and in new areas in Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra.
The report said that tiger populations have also declined in Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana, even though tigers have been spotted for the first time in Himachal Pradesh and in new areas in Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. The tiger population has declined in the Western Ghats.
The Prime Minister also launched the International Big Cats Alliance, which he said will focus on the protection and conservation of seven big cat species: the tiger, lion, leopard, snow leopard, puma, jaguar, and cheetah.
It is also a crime to kill tigers, which are categorized as endangered under India’s Wildlife Protection Act.
National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) has accorded in-principle approval, Feb 2023, to Odisha government’s proposal to declare Debrigarh Wildlife Sanctuary as a tiger reserve (TR). It is now for the government to officially issue a notification to this effect. Once it is done, Debrigarh will be the third tiger reserve of the state.
In Oct 2021, NTCA also approved Chhattisgarh’s proposal to declare the combined areas of the Tamor Pingla Wildlife Sanctuary and the Guru Ghasidas National Park as a Tiger Reserve.
The new Reserve, located in the state’s north, borders Jharkhand and Madhya Pradesh. This will be Chhattisgarh’s fourth Tiger Reserve after the Udanti-Sitanadi, Achanakmar, and Indravati Reserves.
LEARNING FROM HOME/ WITHOUT CLASSES/ BASICS
The All India Tiger Estimation 2018 survey has entered the Guinness World Record for being the world’s largest camera trap wildlife survey.
India has 2,967 tigers, a third more than in 2014, according to results of a tiger census made public on July 29,2019. Madhya Pradesh saw the highest number of tigers at 526, closely followed by Karnataka (524) and Uttarakhand (442).
- Corbett Tiger Reserve in Uttarakhand has the highest number of 231 big cats in the country
- Nagarhole and Bandipore reserves in Karnataka have 127 and 126 tigers.
- Three are no tigers left in Mizoram’s Dampa, West Bengal’s Buxa and Jharkhand’s Palamau reserves
Traditionally eight subspecies of tigers have been recognized, out of which three are extinct. The Indian sub-species is Panthera tigris; Bengal tiger.
The tiger is the largest member of the (cat) family. Tigers are terminal consumers in the ecological food pyramid, and their conservation results in the conservation of all trophic levels in an ecosystem.
Project Tiger is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme of the Government of India which was launched on the 1st of April, 1973 for in-situ conservation of wild tigers in designated tiger reserves. Project Tiger is being implemented in these States in collaboration with the respective State Governments. The challenges include protection against poaching, fragmentation of habitat, securing inviolate space for tigers to facilitate its social dynamics, addressing the tiger-human interface, restoration of corridors, and eliciting public support of local people by providing ecologically sustainable options.
List of Tiger Reserves Core
Sl. No. | Name of Tiger Reserve | State |
1 | Bandipur | Karnataka |
2 | Corbett | Uttarakhand |
Amangarh (buffer of Corbett TR) | Uttar Pradesh | |
3 | Kanha | Madhya Pradesh |
4 | Manas | Assam |
5 | Melghat | Maharashtra |
6 | Palamau | Jharkhand |
7 | Ranthambore | Rajasthan |
8 | Similipal | Odisha |
9 | Sunderbans | West Bengal |
10 | Periyar | Kerala |
11 | Sariska | Rajasthan |
12 | Buxa | West Bengal |
13 | Indravati | Chhattisgarh |
14 | Namdapha | Arunachal Pradesh |
15 | Dudhwa | Uttar Pradesh |
16 | Kalakad-Mundanthurai | Tamil Nadu |
17 | Valmiki | Bihar |
18 | Pench | Madhya Pradesh |
19 | Tadoba-Andhari | Maharashtra |
20 | Bandhavgarh | Madhya Pradesh |
21 | Panna | Madhya Pradesh |
22 | Dampa | Mizoram |
23 | Bhadra | Karnataka |
24 | Pench | Maharashtra |
25 | Pakke | Arunachal Pradesh |
26 | Nameri | Assam |
27 | Satpura | Madhya Pradesh |
28 | Anamalai | Tamil Nadu |
29 | Udanti-Sitanadi | Chattisgarh |
30 | Satkosia | Odisha |
31 | Kaziranga | Assam |
32 | Achanakmar | Chattisgarh |
33 | Dandeli-Anshi | Karnataka |
34 | Sanjay-Dubri | Madhya Pradesh |
35 | Mudumalai | Tamil Nadu |
36 | Nagarahole | Karnataka |
37 | Parambikulam | Kerala |
38 | Sahyadri | Maharashtra |
39 | Biligiri Ranganatha Temple | Karnataka |
40 | Kawal | Telangana |
41 | Sathyamangalam | Tamil Nadu |
42 | Mukandra Hills | Rajasthan |
43 | Nawegaon-Nagzira | Maharashtra |
44 | Nagarjunsagar Srisailam (part)* | Andhra Pradesh |
45 | Amrabad | Telangana |
46 | Pilibhit | Uttar Pradesh |
47 | Bor | Maharashtra |
48 | Rajaji Tige Reserve | Uttarakhand |
49 | Orang Tiger Reserve | Assam |
50 51 | Kamlang Tiger Reserve Srivilliputhur Megamalai | Arunachal Pradesh Tamil Nadu |
0 Comments