Tiger, tiger, still burning bright?
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11/08/2009
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Telegraph (Ranchi)
- 45 scat samples sent to Hyderabad to freeze on number of big cats in Palamau
The state forest department has finally adopted a foolproof method to count the number of tigers in Jharkhand.
It has collected 45 samples of droppings and sent it over to the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad, for tests.
The forest department was due to carry out a census this year. The last census, which was carried out in 2007, confirmed that the tiger count at the Palamau Tiger Reserve had come down to 17 tigers from 45 in 2005.
However, at the time traditional methods like tracing pug marks and setting camera traps were used to compile the information. It is for the first time that faeces will be analysed to check on the tiger population.
The Hyderabad-based laboratory has already confirmed that all the 45 samples sent from the state were that of tigers. Now they will perform tests to identify the number of unique samples.
A scat, or faeces, test reveals the DNA sequence which are then matched individually to eliminate the common ones. This helps in arriving at the exact number of tigers the scat samples had been collected from.
Concerned over the fall in the tiger population, the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) had sought reports from the state forest department to make future plans for conservation of the big cats.
While talking to The Telegraph, chief conservator of forest (wildlife) and biodiversity S.K. Sharma said that they were regularly sending samples to the Hyderabad centre so that a confirmed report on the number of tigers in Palamau could be obtained.