What WWF-India is doing to save the tiger?
At the turn of the 20th century, according to sources, India had an estimated 40,000 tigers in the wild. In 2002, based on pug mark census, this number was 3,642. As per the monitoring exercise by Wildlife Institute of India in association with National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA), Government of India using camera traps, in 2008 we were left with only 1,411 tigers. This number is so small that they will be gone soon if we don’t wake up to the crisis.WWF-India aims for a strategic and focused approach in its tiger conservation efforts. Our goal is to restore, maintain and protect tigers as well as their habitat and prey base in important tiger landscapes in India.
The objectives are to:
- Protect, restore corridors to ensure connectivity between tiger habitats while ensuring that human-tiger conflicts are reduced.
- Reduce pressures on the tiger habitats by promoting alternative livelihoods for local communities in and around tiger habitats.
- Create incentives for local communities as well as state and regional government and opinion-makers to support tiger conservation.
- Enhance capacities of the Forest Department to control poaching of tigers and prey species.
- Provide policy inputs at state and central levels to ensure effective measures for conservation of tigers and their habitats.
- Promote the political will as well as popular support within all sectors of society for tiger conservation.
Thank you soooo much for the info. and i really appreciate you doing so much. Please continue writing.
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