Context:
Long-distance dispersal of tigers from Maharashtra, including a tiger from Tadoba-Andhari Tiger Reserve reaching Andhra Pradesh and another being tracked in Telangana, highlights both the success of tiger conservation and the growing challenge of human-animal conflict, corridor fragmentation, and habitat management.
Key Highlights:
Unusual Long-Distance Movement
- A Royal Bengal Tiger from Maharashtra travelled over 650 km before being captured in Andhra Pradesh.
- Another tiger, believed to be from Maharashtra, has been tracked in Telangana.
- Both cases drew attention because the animals moved close to human settlements.
Dispersal Is a Natural Behaviour
- Tiger dispersal is a normal ecological process.
- It occurs especially among young males searching for:
- new territory,
- prey base,
- mating opportunities.
Sign of Conservation Success
- Increased tiger numbers in source reserves such as those in Chandrapur region can trigger dispersal.
- This indicates that some reserves are producing surplus populations.
Risk of Human-Animal Conflict
- When tigers pass through:
- farms,
- villages,
- roads,
- fragmented forests,
the chances of conflict rise sharply.
- Such movement also raises the risk of poaching and retaliatory action.
Need for Corridors
- Conservationists stress the need to secure wildlife corridors that connect isolated habitats.
- Corridors are essential for gene flow and long-term species survival.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Dispersal:
- Natural movement of animals from their natal area to new habitats.
- Important for colonization, territorial establishment, and genetic exchange.
- Tiger Corridor:
- A stretch of habitat enabling movement of tigers between forest patches or protected areas.
- Helps reduce genetic isolation.
- Human-Animal Conflict:
- Interaction between wildlife and humans resulting in harm to people, animals, or property.
- Royal Bengal Tiger:
- Scientific name: Panthera tigris tigris.
- It is the tiger subspecies found in India.
- Listed in Schedule I of the Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972.
- Included in Appendix I of CITES.
- Project Tiger:
- Launched in 1973 for tiger conservation in India.
- Now implemented under the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA).
Relevant Mains Points:
Why Dispersal Matters
- Dispersal supports:
- gene flow,
- recolonization of habitats,
- strengthening of isolated tiger populations.
- It is therefore an ecological necessity, not merely a management problem.
Emerging Conservation Challenge
- Increase in tiger numbers without corresponding habitat expansion causes pressure on landscapes.
- Many dispersing tigers move through multi-use landscapes, not protected forests alone.
Human Security Dimension
- Villages and peri-urban spaces near forest tracts become vulnerable to:
- livestock depredation,
- panic,
- injury or death,
- retaliatory killings.
- Thus, wildlife conservation must be linked with disaster-risk style preparedness and local response systems.
Institutional and Policy Issues
- Existing reserves may not have adequate space to absorb all dispersing individuals.
- Inter-State coordination becomes necessary when animals move across boundaries.
- Corridor degradation due to roads, mining, agriculture, and settlements weakens long-term conservation gains.
Way Forward
- Legally identify and protect critical tiger corridors.
- Improve habitat quality in degraded forest patches outside protected areas.
- Strengthen community-based conflict mitigation and compensation systems.
- Use technology for real-time tracking and inter-State coordination.
- Mainstream wildlife movement into land-use planning, infrastructure design, and local governance.
UPSC Relevance:
- GS Paper III: Environment & Ecology โ wildlife conservation, habitat connectivity, and biodiversity management.
- GS Paper III: Disaster Management โ human-wildlife conflict as a local risk management issue.
- Prelims: Project Tiger, NTCA, CITES, tiger corridors, dispersal.
