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Eight tigers from India – six females and two males – would be translocated to Cambodia where the big cats have been declared extinct. The Indian tigers would be “re-introduced” in two different locations in Cambodia over the next five years.
The process to place the tigers in safe, enclosed breeding areas will take at least five years, Sokhun Ty, a senior official of the Cambodian ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries has said.
Ty was in India to participate in the 3rd Asia Ministerial Conference on tiger conservation.
He said his government has begun negotiations with India on the matter even though it isn’t formal yet. He added that the talks had begun at the level of envoys in 2015 and that India has “expressed willingness to support the reintroduction of tigers in Cambodia.”
According to a recent WWF report Bringing back Cambodia’s Roar, the last known tiger in Cambodia was reported in the eastern Mondulkiri province in 2007.
“We don’t believe that the tigers have become extinct in Cambodia. In the last five years we confiscated 10 tigers from poachers. They were sent to the zoo. I am sure that in Mondulkiri there must be some tigers, but the number would be very low, and the area is very large,” he added. Cambodian dry forests were once inhabited by the Indochinese tiger.
The WWF report recommends at least eight tigers to be introduced in Cambodian forests, so that after successful breeding the population could rise to 25 over a period of 10 years.
Banteng – a wild cattle, Sambar and Muntjac – barking deer, are the key tiger prey in the forests of Cambodia. The report suggests that to sustain tiger growth under the reintroduction plan, the Sambar deer population must be increased to nine per sq km by 2018 – as prey for one tiger.
Omaliss said some studies had mentioned that Indian tigers and Cambodian tigers were of the same sub-species, so there would likely be no problem in terms of genetics.
As per experts, there are genetic variations between the Asian tigers, which includes the Bengal Tiger, Malayan, Indochinese and Amur aka Siberian tiger.
The WWF report finds tigers from India or Nepal best suited for re-introduction as the habitats are similar. In Cambodia, about 60 percent of the forests are under protection and conservation system.
Cambodia lost most of its tigers due to poaching and deforestation. It is now left with vast “tiger-less” bio-reserves, which includes 1,700 sq km of Mondulkiri Protected Forests, 1,500 sq km of Lomphat Wildlife Sanctuary, 2,000 sq km of Seima Protected Forests - a mixed evergreen forest, and 470 sq km of Phnom Nam Lyr Wildlife Sanctuary.
Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar, during the conference on tiger conservation, reiterated India’s willingness to help increase the tiger population in countries where there was a low tiger count.
(Kushagra Dixit can be reached at kushagra.d@ians.in)
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