Importance Of Tiger Conservation Essay

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CHAPTER 4
TIGER CONSERVATION
INTRODUCTION
“The Indian tiger has been the centre of attraction in the Indian jungles, as a big fame, during the last two centuries. Apart from Maharajas and Nawabs who had interest in hunting of tigers, the British officers, soldiers and civil officers were all keen on bagging at least one tiger before they retired. A few of them attempted to score a century of tiger heads and succeeded. Some even repeated the performance as many as 10 times, thus massacring over a thousand tigers in their lifetimes. Hunting tigers was a free style sport. Some of the States had launched tiger eradication campaigns and pushed the tiger to the wall. But nothing had been so serious as the large scale destruction of the tiger habitat …show more content…

Most people feel it is only a matter of saving an animal that makes a beautiful sight to see. This reason only makes up a fraction of why we need to save this incredible animal. The tiger is at the top of the food chain in the jungles that it roams.
Tiger sightings have become quite rare these days in India, reason being the Tiger killings because of its multitude of medicinal or magical properties that is why tiger trade is very profitable. Genuinely the tiger skin is not fashionable but the smuggling of Tiger fur coats and rugs are not difficult for the impoverished hunters. Tiger in India Even after the bans made by the government warning not to gather even wood from the former hunting grounds, poaching of tigers continue. Still efforts are continuously made to preserve these magnificent predators from …show more content…

Reducing wildlife mortality due to roads in the Nagarahole-Bandipur corridor.
Three major roads pass through the Nagarahole and Bandipur reserves and have had a serious negative impact on one of India’s most critical wildlife habitats. Mitigation measures have been proposed by local authorities and WCS are conducting research to see whether additional steps are required and if the proposed methods will be effective. See the preliminary report for further details.
Recovering wild tiger populations through habitat-defragmentation 2008
WCS-India are working in protected areas in the forests of the Western Ghats in Karnataka to voluntarily resettle families living in enclaves within critical tiger habitats in order to reduce the threat of habitat fragmentation.
WCS. Threat reduction to tigers 2007 -

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