Nepal: Return of the tigers brings both joy and fear

Pantheraman

Well-Known Member
"Nepal has pulled off the extraordinary feat of more than doubling its tiger population in the past 10 years, bringing them back from the brink of extinction. But it has come at a cost to local communities - an increase in tiger attacks.

"There are two feelings when you come head to head with a tiger," says Captain Ayush Jung Bahadur Rana, part of a unit tasked with protecting the big cats.

"Oh my God, what a majestic creature. And the other is, oh my God, am I dead?"

He now often sees Bengal tigers on the armed patrols he carries out across the open plains and dense bush of Bardiya, the largest and most undisturbed national park in Nepal's Terai region."

"But the return of the tigers has created life-threatening challenges for people on the border of the park.

"The community lives in terror," says Manoj Gutam, an eco-business operator and conservationist.

"The common area that tigers, prey species and humans share is so tight. There's a price the community has paid for the world to rejoice in Nepal doubling its tiger numbers."

In the past 12 months, 16 people have been killed by tigers in Nepal. In the previous five years, a combined total of 10 people were killed."

"Officials are looking at providing alternative livelihoods for those who use the national park to collect materials or graze cattle. They plan to develop skills so locals can start small businesses or work in tourism."

"Bhadai Tharu calls a meeting of his local tiger protection team.

His team is making plans to create more secure stables for livestock and to make more grassland in the community forests, adjacent to the park so the tigers will have plenty of deer to eat.

They also run classes for the next generation which will have to live with the return of the tigers. Children are taught about tiger behaviour and told not to go into the forest alone. When asked what their favourite animal is, many children would say a tiger."

Nepal: Return of the tigers brings both joy and fear
 
In much of Asia, tiger populations are rebounding

Better camera tracking and a crackdown on poaching have led to higher estimates of the top predator’s abundance.

Tigers are having a good year.

Nepalese officials announced Friday that the top predator’s numbers within the country’s borders have more than doubled in a bit more than a decade. Across Asia, there are as many as 5,500 tigers prowling jungles and swamps, a leading wildlife group said last week, a 40 percent jump from its 2015 assessment.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/clim...9/tiger-population-asia-nepal/? environment_2
 
In much of Asia, tiger populations are rebounding

Better camera tracking and a crackdown on poaching have led to higher estimates of the top predator’s abundance.

Tigers are having a good year.

Nepalese officials announced Friday that the top predator’s numbers within the country’s borders have more than doubled in a bit more than a decade. Across Asia, there are as many as 5,500 tigers prowling jungles and swamps, a leading wildlife group said last week, a 40 percent jump from its 2015 assessment.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-solutions/2022/07/29/tiger-population-asia-nepal/? environment_2

Here is another relevant article.

Nepal more than doubles its wild tiger population

A major conservation win in the fight to save tigers.

Nepal has now doubled its wild tiger population! A 2022 survey revealed there to be 355 individuals now in the country, a more than 190 percent increase since 2009. It’s an incredible achievement and testament to the conservation efforts of the government, partners, and local communities over the last 12 years.

In 2009, Nepal had a wild tiger population of approximately 121 individuals and their numbers were decreasing. Determined to restore Nepal’s roar, the country joined the global commitment to doubling its wild population by 2022.

Nepal doubles its wild tiger population
 
Here is another relevant article.

Nepal more than doubles its wild tiger population

A major conservation win in the fight to save tigers.

Nepal has now doubled its wild tiger population! A 2022 survey revealed there to be 355 individuals now in the country, a more than 190 percent increase since 2009. It’s an incredible achievement and testament to the conservation efforts of the government, partners, and local communities over the last 12 years.

In 2009, Nepal had a wild tiger population of approximately 121 individuals and their numbers were decreasing. Determined to restore Nepal’s roar, the country joined the global commitment to doubling its wild population by 2022.

Nepal doubles its wild tiger population

Here is another relevant article.

Nepal was supposed to double its tiger population since 2010. It tripled it!
  • There are officially 355 wild tigers in Nepal, according to the latest census, nearly triple the figure of 121 from 2010.
  • Nepal is one of 13 tiger range countries that pledged in 2010, the last Year of the Tiger in the Chinese zodiac, to double the global tiger population by 2022, the current Year of the Tiger.
  • The massive conservation success is expected to make Nepal the only one of the tiger range countries to even come close to doubling its population of the big cat.
  • But Nepal’s success has also raised concerns that its tiger population may fast be approaching the limit of what the country’s protected areas can host, with implications for an increase in human-tiger conflicts.
The number of tigers in Nepal has nearly tripled over the past 12 years, officials announced July 29, on the occasion of International Tiger Day. The figure of 355 tigers blows past the 250 that the Himalayan country was expected to achieve as part of global efforts to double the wild tiger population — but also puts the number of the big cats close to the maximum that Nepal can hold, conservationists say.

https://news-mongabay-com.cdn.amppr...iger-population-since-2010-it-tripled-it/amp/
 
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