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Efforts to save the tiger have pushed India’s population of the big cat to nearly 2,500, Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar on Tuesday said, hailing the strides the country has made in this regard.
Highlighting the need for protecting tiger corridors, he announced incentivising project proponents to give land for compensatory afforestation in Tiger corridors.
As per latest official count, India is home to 2,226 tigers, representing 70 percent of the global population of the endangered big cat species.
Javadekar at the inauguration of the 3rd Asia ministerial conference on tiger conservation said,
He said that as per WWF estimates, the tiger population the world over has grown from 3,200 to 3,890 in the last five years – a 22 percent increase.
(Also Read: World Wild Tiger Count Rises After a Century of Steady Decline)
Stating that the tiger epitomises the health of the ecosystem, he stressed that success with tiger conservation indicates the whole ecosystem is improving.
“We have started a unique experiment with new standard operating procedures (SOPs) for orphaned tiger cubs. This has started yielding results and four such orphaned tigers have been released back into the wild after proper care in ‘in situ’ enclosures,” he said.
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