Begin typing your search above and press return to search.
proflie-avatar
Login
exit_to_app
Can Trump wield his big stick?
access_time 22 Nov 2024 10:39 AM GMT
election commmission
access_time 22 Nov 2024 4:02 AM GMT
Champions Trophy tournament
access_time 21 Nov 2024 5:00 AM GMT
The illness in health care
access_time 20 Nov 2024 5:00 AM GMT
The fire in Manipur should be put out
access_time 21 Nov 2024 9:19 AM GMT
America should also be isolated
access_time 18 Nov 2024 11:57 AM GMT
DEEP READ
Munambam Waqf issue decoded
access_time 16 Nov 2024 5:18 PM GMT
Ukraine
access_time 16 Aug 2023 5:46 AM GMT
Foreign espionage in the UK
access_time 22 Oct 2024 8:38 AM GMT
exit_to_app
Homechevron_rightIndiachevron_rightRaipur to get 27...

Raipur to get 27 tigers relocated from Pilibhit

text_fields
bookmark_border
Raipur to get 27 tigers relocated from Pilibhit
cancel

Pilibhit: The Pilibhit Tiger Reserve (PTR) in Uttar Pradesh will now relocate about 27 tigers to the recently-notified Ranipur Tiger Reserve (RTR) in Chitrakoot. These tigers had been living in the sugarcane fields in PTR.

These large cats, which the locals refer to as "sugarcane tigers" in their dialect, have started to pose a concern to the locals who live close to the PTR.

Forest officials said that RTR, the fourth in Uttar Pradesh, does not have any population of resident tigers.

It only boasts of the occasional presence of a few 'transit big cats' that come and go from the Panna Tiger Reserve in Madhya Pradesh.

Translocation aims at providing protection to the 'sugarcane tigers' of Pilibhit and Lakhimpur Kheri and ensuring the population of the resident tigers at Ranipur reserve, IANS reported.

The state's principal chief conservator of forest (project tiger), Sunil Chaudhary, said" "I will soon be visiting Ranipur to analyse the ground status of the 'sugarcane tigers' to give shape to the translocation project."

He said that unlike the big cats at a reserve, 'sugarcane tigers' stay amid unguarded conditions in cropped fields.

They do face threats of poaching or being injured by barbed wire as well as razor wire fencing done by the farmers at the periphery of their agricultural fields.

These may protect the crops but pose serious threats to the big cats.

"In such a situation, the timely and safe translocation is the need of the hour," Chaudhary said.

He added that before releasing the 'sugarcane tigers' of the Terai region in the Ranipur reserve, it would be preferable to keep them in rewilding enclosures for a specific duration.

"A detailed project report will be filed to the UP government soon in this regard," he said.



Show Full Article
TAGS:#UPtigerPilibhit Tiger ReserveRanipur Tiger Reserve
Next Story