Bhubaneswar:India is home to nearly 75% of world's tiger population, with an estimated tiger count of 3682, as per the survey report tabled by Union MoS Kirti Vardhan Singh in Parliament last November. While government data suggests that the tiger population is increasing in India at a rate of 6 per cent every year; in Odisha, the big cats unfortunately are facing the threat of extinction.
The state government's tiger conservation efforts have taken a hit as poaching and natural causes are threatening the survival of these big cats in Similipal Tiger Reserve. Odisha's Principal Chief Conservator of Forests (PCCF) for Wildlife, Prem Kumar Jha, informed that Similipal has lost three tigers in last several months.
April 30, 2023: A tiger succumbed to injuries after a territorial fight with another tiger.
February 6, 2024: Another tiger died due to a liver infection.
PCCF informed that postmortem reports of both these tigers have confirmed the cause of the death.
In another incident two months ago, a black melanistic tiger cub, separated from its mother, fell victim to poachers in Similipal. "It is believed that the poachers took advantage when the forest department team was busy monitoring Yamuna and Zeenat's movements. Ten people have been arrested in this connection and six guns have been seized. The prime accused is still at large. The forest department officials tracked down the poachers with the help of images captured on the AI cameras," PCCF Jha said.