The Fight to Save the Tiger
The great cat is disappearing throughout its range because of habitat loss and illegal hunting, but an innovative scientist in India may have discovered a way to avert extinction
- By Phil McKenna
- Photographs by Kalyan Varma
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
This small pocket of southwestern India is one of the few places where the tiger popula- tion has reversed the trend and is now strong. Biologists and government officials from all over the world are visiting Nagarhole to learn from Karanth; he gives them hope that they can save their own tigers and other big cats.
Karanth, 63, grew up less than 100 miles from here and first visited Nagarhole (also known as Rajiv Gandhi National Park) in 1967 as a teenager. Hunting and logging were rampant in the park at the time. Seeing even a chital, the small spotted deer now found in droves throughout the park, was rare. “I was pretty sure I would never see a tiger by the time I grew up,” he says.
Karanth went on to study mechanical engineering and then bought a plot of land to farm near Nagarhole so he could be an amateur naturalist in his spare time. In 1984, he entered a wildlife management training program at what is now the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Front Royal, Virginia. Karanth earned a PhD from Mangalore University studying tigers inside Nagarhole. He now works for the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), combining the cool objectivity of an engineer with the passion of a local boy who never tired of looking for tigers. Since he began monitoring the population in 1990, tiger numbers in Nagarhole have climbed from fewer than 10 individuals to more than 50. More important, the park is a source of young tigers: Cubs born here are leaving the park and repopulating the surrounding forests. “There are now 250 tigers in this region,” Karanth says. “If we do everything right, we can have 500.”
“You have to be able to measure tiger populations with confidence, and Karanth has developed the whole tool kit to do this,” says John Seidensticker, head of the Smithsonian’s Conservation Ecology Center and one of Karanth’s early mentors.
Each year after the summer monsoons, Karanth and his team blanket the forest with hundreds of camera traps. When an animal walks past a trap, infrared sensors trigger cameras on both sides of the trail. Every tiger has a unique stripe pattern, which Karanth uses to identify individuals and estimate how many tigers live in Nagarhole at any time. He has collected more than 5,000 tiger photographs.
He has found that one out of four adult tigers in the park dies or disperses into the surrounding forest each year. In the past four years, he says, he documented 40 deaths in the area that includes Nagarhole, Bandipur and several other reserves. But he’s not worried. “If reproduction is up,” he says, “this is not a problem.”
What affects tiger reproduction? The answer might seem simple, but it took Karanth nearly ten years to collect the data to confirm a direct relationship: The more animals available for tigers to eat, the more they reproduce. “The forests were empty not because the tiger had been hunted out, but because their prey had been,” Karanth explains.
The realization has significant implications for how to protect tigers. Many conservation authorities focus on stopping big-game poachers, who kill tigers and sell the body parts for high prices on the black market. (Tiger bone, for instance, is promoted as a cure for arthritis and malaria.) But Karanth’s findings suggest that local villagers who hunt deer and other animals have had a larger impact than wildlife traffickers on tiger numbers. Now 120 men, armed with little more than sticks, patrol Nagarhole looking for illegal snare traps.
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Comments (22)
tigers are my favourite animal in the world they are very cute
Posted by maddie on February 11,2013 | 02:13 AM
this info is not yousful
Posted by amelia on January 18,2013 | 09:32 AM
this info is not yousful
Posted by amelia on January 18,2013 | 09:32 AM
save the tiger
Posted by shruti sharma on January 15,2013 | 04:43 AM
You think these big cats are cute? Help us 'Save the Tiger' then. Never forget, when you help to save even one Tiger, you help to save the species entire. I will be running the Tallahassee Marathon in 2013 with sponsorship from corporate and private donors to raise money exclusively on behalf of 'Save the Tiger'. Volunteer or find your own way to contribute or fundraise. 'Save the Tiger' for us and for future generations. Be part of the change that you envision for the earth.
Posted by Ariel Hessing on December 25,2012 | 10:46 PM
You'd think that with all the organizations that are now working to save big cats, that we could get more done. It's just so hard to turn back powerful economic forces that result in poaching, and to protect big animals that require big territory on which to thrive. With habitat shrinkage and lack of wealth in the remaining habitat countries, the threat is quite formidable. When big names like actor 'Leonardo DiCaprio' get behind 'Save the Tiger', as he clearly has, it gives me more hope, but at the end of the day, you really have to wonder whether we have enough influence to turn this tide before it is too late. As we all know, once a certain critical mass in population size is lost, population collapse is all but inevitable.
Posted by Ariel Hessing on December 10,2012 | 11:27 PM
In order to make a meaningful difference in the furtherance of a cause, stake out a course of action which will allow you to become part of the change that you wish to see take place. By becoming a catalyst for the causal reaction that produces positive and lasting change, you will make the most of your volunteer effort. I have made the cause to save the Tiger my cause. I hope that you will join me and make this just cause your own.
Posted by Ariel Hessing on November 12,2012 | 01:28 AM
save tiger<3
Posted by surbhidev on October 30,2012 | 10:41 AM
we really need to save tiger as we r educated we know about the tiger they r getting vanished its even our duty to save them
Posted by snehal jain on August 16,2012 | 09:55 AM
@ Jeff Gabel: How one can be so narrow minded & not able to see the larger picture. Have you ever read about Eco-system & the symbiotic relationship between Biotic & Abiotic component for healthy balance in Nature. take away the predator & the whole balance of nature will be disturbed to such an extent that our own existence will be questioned. And if you think that wearing their body parts is a part of evolutionary process, then i am sorry to say this "We are doomed".
Posted by ashish ranjan on May 21,2012 | 07:08 AM
we have to help them ,if there were more men like Mr. karantha, the Tigers would be much more safe from the hunters.
Posted by zara patricia on April 30,2012 | 12:37 PM
I was very jubilant to read and hear how one man, Ullas Karanth, has the passion to go great lenghts to keep this species alive and thriving.
Posted by Joe Vitale on April 25,2012 | 02:26 PM
The eye was remembering the Javan Tiger (Panthera tigris sondaica) which extinct long time ago... Perhaps in mythos still alive in mondset of Javanese Culture (the soul of tiger)
Posted by FOReST Indonesia on April 6,2012 | 09:23 AM
I realize that this may sound silly, but I would suggest that the WCS and Mr. Karanth's team seek funding and support from sports teams whose mascots are tigers. At first glance on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tiger_mascots there were at least 100 teams of significant size that could be appealed to. I know some teams are in need of good PR and have the ear of very enthusiastic donors...this might be just what they're looking for. Good luck! Christine
Posted by Christine on April 5,2012 | 01:42 PM
@Jeff Gabel: This is not evolution—Tigers and other species in danger of extinction in the wild are so because of humans. Human overpopulation and exploitation have caused the Tiger population to dwindle. So to say "sit back and watch them die off" is one of the most ignorant things i've heard. Please educate yourself.
Posted by Grenapt on April 5,2012 | 12:09 PM
If people act according to Jeff Gabel's ideas, humanity may soon have the planet all to themselves. Oh, except perhaps for rats, cockroaches, and other such survivor and opportunistic species. What an impoverished existence that will be for our children! Take a look at humanity's art, literature and other aspects of culture if you doubt the value of animals like the tiger, elephant, etc to us all. And how can one speak about evolutionary processes being allowed to happen naturally when human greed is destroying habitat for all creatures, even humans (heard of the Maldives?) Oh. Right. Mr. Gabel's pseudo-scientific pronouncements about evolutionary efficiency and usefulness *have* been applied to human populations before. It's nonsense, destructive nonsense.
Posted by Shauna McKain-Storey on March 28,2012 | 03:45 AM
we must take responsibility for the destruction that we have brought about on the planet this has nothing to do with evolution if there is less nature there is less evolutionary diversity to preserve nature is basic for our survival
Posted by ray hiera on March 27,2012 | 11:13 AM
Jeff Gabels' comment "Who are we to say who should and should not survive. Let the evolutionary chips fall where they will."
If human population, and the power of technology to favour that population, were not the cause of the loss of tiger and other endangered habitat around the world - the evolutionary chips would fall fairly.
As it stands, by our sheer numbers humans are wiping out the planet's most iconic species and evolution has nothing to do with it.
This is shortsighted use of power.
I wish the world's richest people could buy enough habitat in the last areas that big cats survive and dedicate these habitat sanctuaries to trying to protect these and other species from predator humans.
If leading Conservation Organisations unite around the world ....philanthropists of the world could direct their resources to protecting such rare species from humans.... in the last wilderness areas on the planet.
We can't eat money - let's use it to protect the last habitats before they disappear.There is no other planet where this can be done, except this one.
Posted by janet sealy on March 25,2012 | 05:17 PM
Plenty of tiger habitat still remains, even in India and much more in Myanmar, Laos, Malaysia and Cambodia; several studies confirm this. However, tigers have been hunted out from most forests throughout Asia by organized trade-driven poaching. Moreover, after the most valuable animals like tigers, rhinos and pangolins are cleared, the are followed by other wildlife of commercial value - elephants, bears, otters, deer, turtles...until there is an "empty forest", a well-documented phenomenon all over tropical Asia.
Should we interfere? Of course we should - since poachers already do. Commercial trade has nothing to do with evolution; if left alone, tigers do just fine.
Posted by Vedran Krokar on March 25,2012 | 09:34 AM
A great work which gives even greater hope. All the best to Mr. Karanth & his team. I just wished [the] name of Mr. KM Chinappa (Ex. Ranger of Nagarhole) [would] also have been mentioned somewhere in the article.
Posted by RAVINDRA YADAV on March 22,2012 | 02:52 PM
I also think it's a shame to see such a beautiful animal near extinction, however this animal is a powerful predator and seems to have outlived it's usefulness since the habitat for which it evolved is no longer present. Rather than trying to halt and interfere with the evolutionary process it seems that we should simply observe, document and study what is and what has been as much as we can. The future holds what will survive the best and what will be able to utilize the habitat that exists at that time. I am confident, that just as these cats evolved to fill their nich that if that habitat is revived that eventually something will evolve to fill that same nich just as well if not better. Who are we to say who should and should not survive. Let the evolutionary chips fall where they will.
Posted by Jeff Gabel on March 21,2012 | 11:29 PM
I believe the work that is being done in the field to save the last remaining habitat of the Tiger as well as the other endangered large cats is so crucial to preserving the wonders of nature that may vanish from this planet. I only wish I were young enough and had the right education or finances to dig in my heels! I am eternally grateful for the work you are doing.
Posted by Grace Stokes on March 21,2012 | 08:03 AM