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India's rising tiger numbers may be victory only on paper

NEW DELHI — At first, the numbers seem impressive: India’s tiger population has gone up 30 per cent in just four years. The government lauded the news as astonishing evidence of victory in conservation.

NEW DELHI — At first, the numbers seem impressive: India’s tiger population has gone up 30 per cent in just four years. The government lauded the news as astonishing evidence of victory in conservation.

But independent scientists say such an increase — to 2,226 big cats — in so short a time does not make sense.

They worry an enthusiastic new government under Prime Minister Narendra Modi is misinterpreting the numbers, trumpeting false claims of a thriving tiger population that could hurt conservation in the long run.

“The circus is not necessary,” said tiger expert K Ullas Karanth, science director for the Wildlife Conservation Society in Asia. “All of this tom-tom’ing and arm-waving, claiming we’ve had stupendous success, is ridiculous and unscientific.”

The first numbers were released in January. Last week, the government offered details of the data.

Even as scientists begged caution in presenting the count, India’s government doubled down. Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar again boasted of a 30 per cent population increase and Mr Modi rounded that up, saying tiger numbers had seen “about a 40 per cent increase. Feels good to hear it”.

If only it were true. This census differs in an important way from earlier tallies: It estimates India’s entire wild tiger population, while preceding counts focused only on cats in sanctuaries and reserves.

“I’d prefer to say there are 30 per cent more known tigers, rather than say there is actually an increase in tigers. We might not have counted them all earlier,” said Mr Anurag Danda of the World Wildlife Fund in the Sundarbans, one of many groups that participated in the census.

A 30 per cent increase within four years is implausible. Though tigers have high birth rates, they also have high natural death rates and factors such as habitat loss and poaching haven’t slowed. At least 110 tigers were killed between 2011 to last year, barely a drop from the 118 poached between 2007 to 2010, according to the Wildlife Protection Society of India.

Globally, experts believe the best that can be hoped for is a 50 per cent increase in the world population over 10 years — a much more modest rate of growth.

Such incongruities have happened before. India claimed a 17 per cent increase between 2006 and 2010, even while tiger habitats shrank by some 40 per cent.

But while Mr Danda interprets the latest numbers more conservatively than some government officials, he agrees they show that conservation efforts appear to be working: “Otherwise, how come we have so many tigers outside the tiger reserves?”

India is by far the world leader in protecting tigers, spending more resources and money than any other country. For decades it has faced immense challenges, from habitat loss and human encroachment to poaching, disease and pollution. Still, India manages to keep about 70 per cent of the world’s wild tigers on less than 25 per cent of the world’s tiger habitat. That is partly a credit to its vast rural population, which long ago learnt to live in relative proximity to the secretive beasts.

If India can protect tigers, despite a human population 1.26 billion strong, that proves any country can do it, conservationists say.

“But they can’t relax. And that’s my biggest worry about this latest census and the way it’s being presented,” said Mr Alan Rabinowitz, head of Panthera, a New York-based big-cat conservation group. “The worst outcome of that is it allows development and business interests to say, `We’ve been doing really well. We can pull back a bit.’”

When India says it now is home to 2,226 tigers, what it is giving is an estimate — a best-guess based on a technique called index-calibration that combines small-scale cat counts and, through complex calculations, extrapolates them to a national total. Those counts are conducted by various groups — forest rangers, independent scientists, tiger charities — through various means, including photographing individual tigers and analysing tiger droppings and paw prints.

The technique, which India adopted in 2006, is by no means perfect. An Oxford-led study published in February by the journal Methods in Ecology and Evolution suggested the data collection was too erratic for adequately predicting cat populations in areas outside census monitoring.

Scientists also question the absence of independent oversight in the government-organised census and some say that one census every four years is not enough.

“The criticism of the census is rubbish,” said Mr Rajesh Gopal, who headed the government’s National Tiger Conservation Authority from its beginning in 2006 until January, when he joined the Global Tiger Forum.

“Out of the 2,226 tigers estimated in this census, we have photographic evidence for about 1,500 individuals, or 70 per cent. And the statistical models are state-of-the-art. The detractors are not being very fair,” he said. AP

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