Sunday, October 03, 2021

Human-Animal Conflict and The Man-Eater

Tiger - the national animal of India - spread all over the country from the foothills of the Himalayas to the southern tip of India Kanyakumari. India has many National Park and Tiger Reserve. It was Project Tiger - a tiger conservation program that began in 1973 to prevent the animal from becoming extinct and preserving its natural habitat - the tiger population in India has increased to nearly 4000.

Tiger wall painting from Amirthi zoological park, near Vellore

There are five tiger reserves in our state (Tamil Nadu), and the Mudumalai in the Nilgiri District is the oldest National Park and Tiger Reserve. Nilgiri is the largest biosphere covering about 80% of the forest, and Ooty, a popular south Indian hill-station, is the administrative town of the district. And Nilgiri being a great forest terrain with widespread tea plantations and small towns and villages,  the human-animal conflict has been a common thing, and sometimes it costs human lives. 

Most of the time,  elephants cause damage to materials and lives of people, and seldom tigers or leopards, or bear cause death. Human-animal conflict is mainly because of humans occupying forest space and interfering with the path of animals. Human encroachment and building of houses and cultivation on the migratory path lost track of animals to invade human habitation and confront lives. 

Now coming to the man-eater that has taken away the lives of four people in the last few months in the Nilgiris has become a threat to lives adjoining the Tiger Reserve. The higher officials have issued an order to shoot the man-eating Tiger against the initial decision of capture it alive using the tranquilizer to sedate. The decision to kill the Tiger was taken based on 4th victim, who was killed and ate by the Tiger,  while in the other incidents, the victims were just stroke to die. 

Tiger is said to be a shy animal and mostly seems to avoid the human presence and stay away in the dense forest area, infiltrate the human habitation only when it was unable to survive in the forest, due to wound or aging. The case of the man-eating Tiger, which caused the death of 4 people, has taken place in the buffer zone - an area adjoining the forest, where people drive cattle for grazing. 

We can't justify here where the villagers would go - who lives inside or adjoining the forest - to feed their livestock.  I think it's the human mistakes that we can't blame animals, and they don't know the boundaries, and deforestation has shrunk their habitation.  So the only way to protect their existence was by giving before animals and staying away from the forest. 

They say, once the man-eater would always like to taste human flesh, and driving it away could never be a solution than hunt down or cage the Tiger at some protected place. I watched a Bollywood movie lately called Sherni - acted by Vidya Balan as a woman forest officer - trying to catch (believed to be) a  man-eating Tigress and create peace in a remote village adjoining forest. But the movie ends with Tigress falling prey to human pride and official injustice, leaving back its cubs. 

The targeted man-eater seems to keep moving since the victims don't come from the same place, and the last man reported to die was from Masinagudi, about 30-35kms from the previous victim. Masinagudi is a small town located in the middle of Mudumalai Tiger Reserve is one place that greatly infiltrates the forest land by building plenty of resorts in the buffer zone. Due to strict action lately, many resorts built on elephant corridors were closed.

The latest update was the man-eater escape the official surveillance! And a search operation is launched with the help of Kumki elephants - trained elephants to trap and rescue wild elephants. As a piece of good news, the Tiger will be caught alive, said the officials. 

 (sorry for the long post) I just went with the flow of thought and info. Thank you 


8 comments:

eileeninmd said...

Hello,
Great post on the Tiger, it is a beautiful animal. I think it hard when the humans start to take over the habitat of a wild animal. I have heard of cases where an animal has to be put down due to it's actions with people. A man-eating tiger would be very scary. Thank you for linking up and sharing your post. Take care, enjoy your day! Have a great new week!

Tom said...

...this is interesting and I'm glad that it isn't a problem here.

carol l mckenna said...

Wonderful post ~ thoughtful and knowledgeable ~ I do tend to think that it is quite consistently 'Man' who provokes in some way the behavior of wild animals ~ so am glad to hear that they will capture rather shoot the Tiger, Tigeress ~ ~Xo

Living in the moment,

A ShutterBug Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)

Bill said...

The tiger is a beautiful animal and it's a shame when humans and animals can't get along, It seems the animal always pays the price.
Have a great new week, Jeevan.

Rose said...

Interesting...I cannot imagine having to worry about being attacked by a tiger. It is too bad that these things happen. I really love the wild cats.

Nux V said...

Coincidently, tiger is also the national animal of Malaysia. The Malayan tiger is in our coat of arms.

~Lavender Dreamer~ said...

It really is a beautiful animal and I think you expressed yourself well.

Nancy Chan said...

Tiger is a beautiful animal. The wild animals have no choice because their space has been disturbed.