Thursday 19 April 2012

Panna Selected as a Perfect Tiger Reserve for Tiger Conservation


Source of the forest department says, Panna national park is an ideal place for tiger conservation. Panna have 0 tiger in 2009 but now about a dozen cubs and six adult tigers are roaming in the area of Panna National Park in Madhya Pradesh. Panna tiger reserve is on of the reserves in world for tiger conservation. A senior officer of Panna tiger reserve said, it is possible by help of Wildlife Institute of India (WII) and Panna has caught the attention of International forest department but wildlife organization of Russia and Cambodia is very inspiring by the improvement of Panna.  

Pench National Park is situated in the south boundary of Madhya Pradesh in both districts of Seoni and the Chhindwara, India.80 kilometres distance between Pench tiger reserve and Nagpur and covered total 758 square kilometres. Pench wildlife sanctuary was declared in 1983 and was declared as Tiger reserve in the 1992 under the tiger project of central government. It is 19th tiger project reserve in the India.
Pench tiger reserve is most popular for its tiger population, Gaur, Nilgai wild pig, wild dog and Sambar. There are 40 different species of the Mammals, 200 different of species birds, 15 different species of reptiles and 5 different species of the amphibians. It is also known for its natural beauty and charming cheering of the birds.    
Tiger recovery programme of Panna national park has been referred to the best practices of reintroduction that effectively the blends both technical and the managerial strategies simultaneously, said by Dr K Ramesh, WII scientist. He is heading technical group as the principal investigator in reintroduction and the monitoring programme in the Pann tiger reserve.   

He confirmed that the reintroduction of the population of tiger was in pipeline in both Russia and the Cambodia on the line of much appreciated the strategies the adopted in the Panna national park. It is expected to be the carried out under eastern plain the landscape the programme of world wildlife fund. Ramesh was in the Cambodia recently to divide his experiences and the expertise on subject. 

First 2 tigresses T1 and the T2 were introduced from the Kanha tiger reserve and the Bandhavgarh National Park in the March 2009. After sometime of shifting the T1 and T2 one male tiger (T3) was brought from the Pench National Park and during in the one year 2010, T1 and T2 delivered their cubs. There are two orphaned female cubs (T4 and T5) were brought in the March and the November 2011 form the Kanha national Park. Its mother has dead in a fight with another tiger in May 2005.

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