Leopards: India

From Indpaedia
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Guidelines: 2011)
(2016)
Line 75: Line 75:
 
To track the movement of animals, the department has decided to install 10 camera traps in areas frequented by them and near waterholes. "We have identified some areas in Jeypore and Borigumma forest ranges, where these cameras will be installed. They will also help confirm presence of more leopards in the forest division," the DFO said.
 
To track the movement of animals, the department has decided to install 10 camera traps in areas frequented by them and near waterholes. "We have identified some areas in Jeypore and Borigumma forest ranges, where these cameras will be installed. They will also help confirm presence of more leopards in the forest division," the DFO said.
 
Spread over 1,199 sq km, the forest division comprises Jeypore, Boipariguda, Kundura, Kotpad, Borigumma and Gupteswar forests ranges and shares borders with forests in Chhattisgarh.
 
Spread over 1,199 sq km, the forest division comprises Jeypore, Boipariguda, Kundura, Kotpad, Borigumma and Gupteswar forests ranges and shares borders with forests in Chhattisgarh.
 +
 +
=2017=
 +
==Ghaziabad==
 +
[http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/ghaziabad/leopard-strays-into-ghaziabads-residential-area-injures-two/articleshow/58062198.cms  Abhijay Jha, The Times of India], April 8, 2017
 +
 +
[[File: A leopard was sighted in Sahibabad in April 2017.jpg|A leopard was sighted in Sahibabad in April 2017; [http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/ghaziabad/leopard-strays-into-ghaziabads-residential-area-injures-two/articleshow/58062198.cms The Times of India], April 8, 2017|frame|500px]]
 +
 +
GHAZIABAD: A full grown male leopard was rescued from a house in Bhopura's Krishna Vihar Kuti, in Sahibabad area in the wee hours of Friday but not before injuring two people.
 +
The leopard was first spotted in the residential area on Thursday night at around 9 pm creating panic among residents. In a bid to escape, the leopard somehow entered a house and was confined in a room when an alert resident locked it from outside. Soon forest department officials reached the spot and cordoned off the area by placing a net around all possible exits.
 +
 +
"I had just returned from office and was parking my bike when I suddenly noticed a leopard which attacked me" says Bittu, 32. "The leopard sunk his teeth in my arms and chest but I managed to shrug it off and it ran away" adds Bittu. He was rushed to GTB Hospital where first aid was administered, he was discharged later.
 +
The leopard then made its way into the house of one Satpal whose twenty-one-year-old daughter Preeti fled to the terrace when she saw the animal approaching. "I noticed it approaching and raced towards the terrace while shouting "tendua ghus aaya hai" says Preeti. "Hearing me some people gathered and locked the room where the animal had entered and informed police and forest department officials" adds Preeti.
 +
 +
Anup Singh, circle officer Sahibabad said, "We reached the spot shortly after we were informed of a leopard sighting but since the animal was locked in a room we were not in a position to say whether it was a leopard or fishing cat or some other animal. When a team of forest officials arrived, it cordoned off the area by placing a net and it was only at round 4 am that forest officials confirmed that it is actually a leopard" adds Singh.
 +
 +
Forest Range Officer Asif Shehzad meanwhile said, "It is a full grown male leopard and a team of officials were summoned from Meerut and the animal was tranquilized in the early hours of Friday. It was transported to Shivalik-Saharanpur forest range and was set free."
 +
 +
BP Singh, District Forest Officer meanwhile said, "The leopard must have strayed from the nearby Hindon Air Force forest area either in search of food or must have lost its sense of direction. I feel that members of the cat family have this tendency of losing sense of direction in an overcast condition and this leopard may have wandered in a residential area because of this very reason."
 +
 +
There have been instances of leopard sightings in the past in Ghaziabad and adjoining districts as it is their natural habitat which is provided by thick foliage around flood plain areas of Yamuna and Hindon.
  
 
=See also=
 
=See also=

Revision as of 00:00, 22 May 2017

Leopards in India: Some essential facts; Graphic courtesy: The Times of India

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

Contents

80% decline in 20th-century

The Times of India Apr 06 2015

Seema Sharma

Leopard count down by 80%: Study

Fast shrinking habitat bringing them in conflict with humans: Scientists

Trashing speculation following the spate of recent incidents of humanleopard conflict which indicated that leopard numbers were on the rise, a study conducted by three wildlife scientists has found that the leopard population in the country, on the contrary , has declined by a whopping 7080% over the past 100 years. The study , conducted over four years by Samrat Mondal of the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), Krithi K Karanth of the Wildlife Conservation Society, and Uma Rama Krishnan of the National Centre for Biological Sciences (NCBS), has been sent to wildlife journals for review.

Talking to TOI, Mondal said that the study was primarily based on genetic data analysis. “The population estimation of leopards has been done in different parts of the country but no cumulative data is available. We collected molecular data from fecal samples of leopards, and took into account depletion of their habitat as well as prey range over the past 100odd years. When we analysed the data, we found an almost 70-80% decrease in the prevalence of leopards.“

In India, leopard conservation is often clubbed with tigers because many leopards are in tiger reserves. But be cause a reliable count of their numbers is not available, not much has been done for their systematic protection.

“Tigers have got protection under the Project Tiger program, following which poachers have now started replacing tiger body parts with those of leopards. Around 4,000 body parts and bones of leopards were recovered in the period 1994-2013, compared to 1,000 body parts of tigers,“ said Mondal.

Rising instances of conflict with humans is also impacting the big cats. “Severe depletion of habitat and prey is bringing leopards in direct conflict with humans,“ said AK Singh, senior scientist with the World Wide Fund for Nature, Uttarakhand.

Accentuating the problem, Mondal says, is the fact that leopards are territorial animals and solitary by nature. “Because their territory is getting encroached, instances of conflict are on the rise, which in turn is affecting their population.“

Report said 28, but Odisha claims it has 60 tigers

The wildlife wing of Odisha's forest department has courted controversy by claiming that the number of big cats in the state is around 60. The All India Tiger Estimation Report, 2014, released in January 2015 by the Wildlife Institute of India, reported a fall in tiger population to 28 from 32 in 2010 and 45 in 2006 in the state. “The tiger population will be around 60. We will be able to make it official after WII endorses the additional inputs,“ the principal chief conservator of forest said.

2011: Guidelines

Please see graphic

MoEF’s 2011 guidelines on how to deal with the leopard-human conflict; The Times of India, Dec 4, 2016

2014 census

The Times of India, Sep 07 2015

Leopard population in India, state-wise, in 2014; Graphic courtesy: The Times of India, Sep 07 2015

Amit Bhattacharya

For first time, India gets a count of its leopards: 12,000-14,000  India finally has an estimate of its most populous large predator, the leopard. The first count of India's leopards, conducted alongside last year's tiger census, has put the spotted cat population at 7,910 in and around tiger habitats across the country , except the northeast. The leopards were counted using the same methods adopted for the tiger census, which involved getting pictures of animals through camera-trapping and gathering other evidence of their presence, and then extrapolating the numbers to cover the entire forest landscape.

“There are leopards out side the areas we covered...we estimate India's total leopard population to be 12,000 to 14,000,“ said Yadvendradev V Jhala, lead scientist of the tiger census, who presented the leopard figures at Wildlife Institute of India's annual research seminar in Dehradun last week. The maiden count of In dia's leopards has pro vided the first accurate picture of the density and distribution of the spotted cats, which were earlier guesstimated to be anywhere between 10,000 and 45,000.

The exercise covered 3,50,000 sq km of forested habitat across the Shivalik hills and Gangetic plains, central India and the Western Ghats.As many as 17,143 pictures of 1,647 individual leopards were obtained during the exercise that covered most forested landscapes, even the low-grade revenue forests.

The study found the species well distributed across the country, indicating that India's leopard population is “quite healthy“.

“Most of the leopard populations are contiguous, ensuring a healthy genetic exchange. So, leopards do not face the problems of isolated populations that plague Indian tigers,“ Jhala told TOI.

The wildlife biologist said since there were no previous estimates, there was no way of knowing whether the leopard population was growing or declining. “But leopards are doing far better than tigers because they can survive in scrubs and humanimpacted forests as well.That's why they are not in imminent danger as the tigers,“ he said. However, healthy forests remain crucial to the long-term survival of leopards in India, he noted.

2016

Orissa

The Times of India

Wildlife enthusiasts have some reason to cheer. Though the recent tiger census in Jeypore forest division drew a blank, the team spotted at least five leopards, a jump of four since the last headcount in 2013-14. The six-day census began on February 5 and 318 employees of the forest department participated in it. According to forest officials, two leopards were spotted near Bichalkota under Jeypore forest range and three more at Boipariguda forest range. "To capture pug marks of animals, pressure impression pads were put up at several places. These were sent to the office of principal chief conservator of forests (wildlife), which confirmed presence of five leopards, two among them female, in the forest division," said DFO (Jeypore) A K Kar. He didn't rule out presence of more leopards in the forests under the division. To track the movement of animals, the department has decided to install 10 camera traps in areas frequented by them and near waterholes. "We have identified some areas in Jeypore and Borigumma forest ranges, where these cameras will be installed. They will also help confirm presence of more leopards in the forest division," the DFO said. Spread over 1,199 sq km, the forest division comprises Jeypore, Boipariguda, Kundura, Kotpad, Borigumma and Gupteswar forests ranges and shares borders with forests in Chhattisgarh.

2017

Ghaziabad

Abhijay Jha, The Times of India, April 8, 2017

A leopard was sighted in Sahibabad in April 2017; The Times of India, April 8, 2017

GHAZIABAD: A full grown male leopard was rescued from a house in Bhopura's Krishna Vihar Kuti, in Sahibabad area in the wee hours of Friday but not before injuring two people. The leopard was first spotted in the residential area on Thursday night at around 9 pm creating panic among residents. In a bid to escape, the leopard somehow entered a house and was confined in a room when an alert resident locked it from outside. Soon forest department officials reached the spot and cordoned off the area by placing a net around all possible exits.

"I had just returned from office and was parking my bike when I suddenly noticed a leopard which attacked me" says Bittu, 32. "The leopard sunk his teeth in my arms and chest but I managed to shrug it off and it ran away" adds Bittu. He was rushed to GTB Hospital where first aid was administered, he was discharged later. The leopard then made its way into the house of one Satpal whose twenty-one-year-old daughter Preeti fled to the terrace when she saw the animal approaching. "I noticed it approaching and raced towards the terrace while shouting "tendua ghus aaya hai" says Preeti. "Hearing me some people gathered and locked the room where the animal had entered and informed police and forest department officials" adds Preeti.

Anup Singh, circle officer Sahibabad said, "We reached the spot shortly after we were informed of a leopard sighting but since the animal was locked in a room we were not in a position to say whether it was a leopard or fishing cat or some other animal. When a team of forest officials arrived, it cordoned off the area by placing a net and it was only at round 4 am that forest officials confirmed that it is actually a leopard" adds Singh.

Forest Range Officer Asif Shehzad meanwhile said, "It is a full grown male leopard and a team of officials were summoned from Meerut and the animal was tranquilized in the early hours of Friday. It was transported to Shivalik-Saharanpur forest range and was set free."

BP Singh, District Forest Officer meanwhile said, "The leopard must have strayed from the nearby Hindon Air Force forest area either in search of food or must have lost its sense of direction. I feel that members of the cat family have this tendency of losing sense of direction in an overcast condition and this leopard may have wandered in a residential area because of this very reason."

There have been instances of leopard sightings in the past in Ghaziabad and adjoining districts as it is their natural habitat which is provided by thick foliage around flood plain areas of Yamuna and Hindon.

See also

Snow leopards: India

Leopards: India

Land animals: India G-L

Delhi: Wildlife (Fauna)

A 'Search’ of the word ‘leopards’ on Indpaedia will lead to several other articles as well.

And also

Tigers: India

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox
Translate