Concern over tiger buffer areas
Tiger population increased but new buffer areas need to be identified says wildlife activists.
By : c.s. kotteswaran
Update: 2013-11-15 08:58 GMT
Chennai: Wildlife activists in Tamil Nadu have reason to be enthused by the recent report from the National Tiger Conservation Authority that says that the tiger population in the southern states, particularly the Nilgiri biosphere, has improved, but they are also disappointed with the state forest department for delaying the combining of peripheral reserve areas with the three project tiger reserves in the state.
The previous forest secretary C.V. Shankar passed a government notification last August under which new buffer areas were declared as critical tiger habitats in the three tiger reserves — Mudumalai, Anamalai and Kalakad-Mundanthuraitiger reserves — but though the orders were passed they are yet to be implemented in letter and spirit, said a forest ranger.
“The tiger population in Tamil Nadu is surging, and the Mudumalai Tiger Reserve (MTR), in particular, continues showing positive results in conservation. So it is high time that peripheral areas like Sigur, Singara and the Nilgiri eastern slope of Thengumaradha section, be added to the MTR as its buffer zone,” said N. Balaji, a regular participant in state wildlife censuses.
A senior forest official said that the annexure of buffer areas was underway. A government order had been passed and was being implemented in a phased manner.
Conservation was the ultimate objective and that would not be compromised; the delay was procedural and may last for only a few more weeks, the official said, confident that Tamil Nadu would continue as a wildlife hub for breeding tigers.
Recently, top wildlife officials inspected MTR and stressed the need for conservation, but the need of the hour is more protected areas and less human interface and that can be achieved only by adding more areas supporting the core tiger habitats, explained a biologist associated with a wildlife NGO.
The entire Thengumradha section is a connective corridor for MTR and Sathyamangalam forests and the addition of buffer zones in these areas would protect wildlife habitat and improve gene mitigation among wild animals, he explained.