Tezpur:In what might cheer the wildlife enthusiasts, the Assam forest department has received photographic evidence of the presence of the Royal Bengal Tiger in the Sonai-Rupai wildlife sanctuary in Assam's Sonitpur district. According to the forest department officials, this is the first photographic evidence of the presence of Tigers in the Sonai Rupai Wildlife Sanctuary.
The Sonai Rupai Wildlife Sanctuary has a contiguous landscape with the Nameri Tiger Reserve and the Sonai Rupai Wildlife Sanctuary forms the core of the tiger reserve. Divisional Forest Officer of the Western Assam Wildlife Division Piraisoodan B (IFS) said this while adding that citing a tiger for the first time in Sonai Rupai is good news for the wildlife sanctuary.
He said that the forest department used camera traps to assess the usage of 12 water bodies renovated recently by the forest department. "While the camera trap recorded usage of water bodies by other animals like leopards and deers, the photographic evidence of Tiger is good news," he said.
It may be mentioned that sprawling across 220 square kilometres in the Himalayan foothills, the Sonai Rupai Wildlife Sanctuary is located along the state's border with Arunachal Pradesh. Earlier, there used to be a huge number of wildlife, including the one-horned rhinos, but unabated encroachment has affected the wildlife severely in the past few decades.
Earlier, this year, an RTI application filed by an activist in Assam exposed that there had been the presence of 38 schools and the construction of paved roads within the wildlife sanctuary.