Showing posts with label tiger conservation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tiger conservation. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 March 2011

More footprints in the Forest...















A recent census suggests that tiger populations in India are bouncing back: the 2007 count registered around 1400 cats, a figure which has risen to over 1700 this year.

Conducting their study across 17 Indian states, experts used hidden cameras and DNA testing to collect one of the most accurate counts to date - the 2007 census was largely collected by counting 'pugmarks' and taking individual sightings during tiger watching surveys.


Despite the obvious excitement, Jairam Ramesh, India's Environment Minister,and Rajesh Gopal, director of the National Tiger Conservation Authority, agree that we still have a long way to go towards conserving India's cats and, ultimately, saving them from extinction, with the destruction of wildlife corridors (natural pathways between reserves) one of the most pressing issues.

To put the current census into a long-term perspective, whilst we have gained 300 tigers in this year's census, we have lost more than 98000 over the past century.

Related posts by Lucy Grewcock:
Broken Tail: A pioneer for tiger conservation
Fierce Roars over Tiger Tourism
Tiger Penis and Shark Fin Soup

This post was also published on Responsible Travel News
For travel journalism and copywriting services visit www.lucygrewcock.com

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Broken Tail - A Pioneer for Tiger Conservation


This evening's Natural World told the story of Broken Tail, a plucky young tiger who met his end when he wandered far from the safety of his home-ground in India's Ranthambore National Park, described by narrator Colin Stafford-Johnson as "tiger paradise".

Colin communicates the personality behind the predator, describing how Broken Tail was unique in his mischievous, confident and often arrogant behaviour; traits which no doubt motivated his bold decision to leave the reserve. A year later, the animal was hit by a train, 100 miles away in Darrah.

In what seems initially like a futile journey, Colin aims to retrace the tiger's journey, through inhospitable landscapes and "tiger killing territory", rife with poachers. But he assures us that his mission is vital to aid tiger conservation, in highlighting the scattered habitats where Broken Tail would have found refuge on his route through the badlands.

Having left his home "in search of girls", we realise the cold reality that, for Broken tail "there was no-one else out there", and we are warned that "tigers are absolutely on the edge". If current trends continue, India's 1400 wild tigers will have disappeared in five years time. Making a vital connection, Colin conveys to us that human survival in India is wholly dependent on the existence of tigers: without tigers the forests will not be protected, and without forests watersheds will disappear.

But through the eye-witnesses he meets, Colin finds a glimmer of hope for the future of India's tiger population. The reverence many of India's people continue to hold for nature is evident in those who watched the tiger drink and pass through their homes on his journey. And when Broken Tail's body is stretchered off the railway track, he's cremated with the same respect as a human would be. "Can you imagine anyone allowing such a predator to roam freely in Europe?" Colin asks us.

Colin's quest was not in vain. Following his campaign to to connect India's unprotected habitat fragments, Darrah has since been designated a National Park and discussions over whether Ranthambore should become a designated tiger reserve are underway.

If you missed Natural World tonight, you can watch it again here on BBC iplayer

Image taken from WXXI

Other articles about Tiger conservation in India:
- The Lost Land of the Tiger
- Fierce Roars Over Tiger Tourism
- Tiger Penis and Shark Fin Soup

For travel journalism and copywriting services visit www.lucygrewcock.com
This blog was also posted on Responsible Travel News

Thursday, 23 September 2010

The Lost Land of the Tiger



If you’ve missed the BBC 1 series ‘The Lost Land of the Tiger’ this week, make sure you catch up on BBC iplayer…

In the mountains of Bhutan, battling dense tropical jungle, crippling altitude sickness, rotting food supplies and hailstones the size of golf balls, the BBC's team of explorers, scientists and camera-men, filmed tigers in the mighty Himalayas at 4,000m above sea level - an elevation previously thought to inhospitable for tigers to inhabit.

With the BBC claiming its film was the first evidence that the animals could live and breed in the highest mountain range on earth, hopes have been raised for a high-altitude sanctuary that could provide a refuge for the endangered animal. The discovery has initiated ambitious plans to study and conserve Bhutan’s wildlife by creating a series of ecological corridors.

"This is such a significant discovery for tiger survival," said wildlife cameraman, Gordon Buchanan. "The tigers' behaviour suggests they are breeding and I am convinced that there must now be cubs somewhere on this mountain."

Conservationists believe that Bhutan’s sparsely populated, extreme-altitude habitat is relatively unthreatened by human development and could provide a ‘tiger corridor’ that could link animals in other parts of Asia. With over 70% of the country covered in forest, strong Buddhist beliefs, limited tourism and very little exploitation , Bhutan is potentially one of the safest habitats on earth for one of world’s most threatened species. Knowing that the world’s largest cat can live and breed at such an altitude gives massive hope to tiger populations worldwide.

This breaking research has been key in filling in knowledge gaps about Bhutan;s tigers, but there is still much work to be done. Over the past century, species of tiger have vanished from Bali, Java and the Middle-East, with populations of the Sumatran and South China tigers now at critical levels. In neighbouring India, China and Nepal, habitat loss and hunting have dangerously depleted the tiger populations, and globally, there are thought to be just over 3,000 tigers left in the wild - a 5% drop from the start of the last century.

Image taken from guardian.co.uk
If you missed the series, watch on BBC iplayer

Related links:Read Justin Francis' blog 'India bans Tiger Tourism' at Responsible Travel's blog

Wednesday, 9 June 2010

Fierce roars over tiger tourism

From Sher Kahn to Tigger, do we love Tigers too much? The Indian Government recently suggested that tigers are being ‘loved to death’ by tourists and that phasing out of tourism is necessary in order to save the big cats from imminent extinction. The decision has ignited fierce rows and attracted divided opinions between conservationists.

Surveys carried out by The Wildlife Institute of India, revealed that tiger populations fell by up to 60% between 2002 and 2008; over 700 cats disappeared in six years. 21 tiger are already thought to have died in 2010 and it is estimated that around 1400 remain in the wild today.

The need for protection has been formally recognised in India since 1970, when hunting was banned. The Wildlife protection act followed in 1972 and lead to the establishment of ‘Project Tiger’. Renamed ‘the National Tiger Conservation Authority’ in 2006, the aim is to create ‘safe havens’, in which tigers can live undisturbed. According to the authority, tiger populations have increased significantly since its launch and it has “…put the tiger on an assured course of recovery”.

But tourism is unregulated in India’s reserves and it is estimated that hundreds of thousands visit each year. Hotels have been blamed for blocking pathways between tiger territories and, to ensure that tourists get what they’re paying for, luxury lodges have been built in core areas to maximise the chances of a sighting. In India’s oldest National Park, named after hunter turned conservationist Jim Corbett, their most recent guesthouses are described as being in ‘excellent tiger territory’.
Alongside infrastructure, modern practices in wildlife tracking are also thought to be a major threat. Where reserves use radio telemetry systems, visitors can be quickly alerted to a sighting. Travelling on elephant back, in jeeps or 20 seater vehicles, they are likely to disrupt grasslands on their cross-country journeys, causing wider ecological damage. One tourism website claims that, in Ranthambore National Park, tigers are ‘…oblivious of jeep loads of tourists’.


The right decision?
No-one is blind to the fact that many other factors threaten the species. Historically, Tiger hunting was a prestigious sport, one practiced by royals from India to England. In China, from grinding the tail as a cancer cure, to rubbing tiger brain on your body to treat laziness, tiger has been used in traditional medicine for centuries and the demand is still high. Today, hunting is illegal and international trade in tiger parts is banned but markets throughout China continue to sell without shame. With a whole cat fetching around $50,000, the Environmental Investigation Agency says that tiger trade is thriving throughout the world, including in the USA and Europe.

Whilst it is widely accepted that something needs to be done, the extent to which tourism should be blamed is contested; The Times of India state that the fall in tiger populations has “little to do with tourists” and Paul Goldstein, tiger campaigner and tour guide with holiday company ‘Exodus’, refers to the curb on tourism as “damaging, misleading and incorrect”, advocating the role of tourism as vital in protecting habitats. There are incidences where tourists have acted as environmental stewards, alerting authorities to malpractice and mismanagement. With this in mind, could banning tourism actually hasten the decline? Guardian ‘green columnist’ Kevin Rushby, suggests that in removing tourists tigers can be ‘…exterminated in peace and quiet’.

But perhaps we are over-reacting. The decision has not been to enforce a total ban on tiger-tourism throughout India. Justin Francis of the agency ‘Responsible Travel’ clarifies Ramesh’s tourism curb, accepting it as a necessary but short term measure. It should be remembered that there are vast differences between tourism practices and where some may serve to protect the environment, other forms can be severely damaging. Responsible tour operators and conservation projects can be hugely beneficial in promoting environmental protection but without strict management and tighter control, we cannot guarantee that all operators follow such good practice.

Surely then, the solution is easy; Tourism needs to change, not to vanish. By banning unsustainable and damaging practices, tiger populations can be revived? Justin Francis highlights that this is by no means a new approach but one that has been widely promoted for decades. The problem is that it is not a system that the Government has been able to manage so far. Achieving sustainable tourism should be a long term goal but is not one that can be realised overnight. Hence, Francis recognises the Government’s decision to take more drastic and immediate action; “We don’t have the luxury of time to try to reorganise tourism – tigers may be extinct within five years.”


The outlook
Whether it be through tourism, population increase, hunting or Chinese medicine, human beings are the tiger’s main predator but they are also their guardians. Despite the doom and gloom, India still holds the best chance for saving tigers in the wild. Whilst elsewhere, in Indonesia and the Middle East, tigers are long gone, India harbours the world’s biggest concentration.

Ideally, it seems that the Government would like to develop guidelines where eco-tourism can operate sustainably, using specific schemes for India’s unique reserves. While we wait patiently for plans to emerge, we are urged to remember that reserves are first and foremost for protecting tigers and whether it should be considered alongside or as a secondary outcome, tourism should never take precedence.

Photo from projo.com

Related links: Read Justin Francis' blog 'India bans Tiger Tourism' at Responsible Travel's blog