June 30, 2015
AFP
AHMEDABAD
Wildlife experts voiced anger Monday at the death of
nine endangered lions in floods in western India, saying it showed that
at least some of them should be relocated to preserve their numbers.
Devastating
floods triggered by annual monsoon rains last week killed at least 55
people in the state of Gujarat, which is also home to about 500 Asiatic
lions in their last remaining sanctuary globally.
Gujarat’s chief
wildlife officer S.C Pant said 100 forest officers were searching the
banks of a flooded river that runs alongside the Gir sanctuary after
eight lion carcasses were found, while another which was rescued later
died.
“Already 27 lions have been tracked near villages near the river. They are in good condition,” Pant told AFP.
But
wildlife expert Ravi Chellam said the floods were evidence that the
survival of the species was at risk because the lions were living in
only one sanctuary.
“There is no way to predict the occurrence of
catastrophes, which is why it is crucial to establish at least one more
free-ranging population of lions before such risks manifest again,”
Chellam, who has studied the animals in Gir for years, told AFP.
The
lions were caught in a legal and political battle in 2013 when the
Supreme Court ruled that some of them should be relocated to a sanctuary
in a neighbouring state.
Experts argued that restricting the lions to just one area put them at risk of inbreeding, disease and extinction.
But
the Gujarat government has resisted any move from the state, where the
lions are a source of pride, to neighbouring Madhya Pradesh state which
says it has the expertise to manage them.
Pant rejected what he was
said was an attempt to “exploit” the tragic deaths. “An isolated
incidence of flooding cannot be the reason for shifting the lions to
other states,” he said.
The cats are a sub-species of lion which are
slightly smaller than their African cousins and have a fold of skin
along their bellies. Census figures released in May show the population
has increased in recent years to 523.
http://nation.com.pk/snippets/30-Jun-2015/dead-lions-in-india-floods-spark-catfight
English language news articles from year 2007 plus find out everything about Asiatic Lion and Gir Forest. Latest News, Useful Articles, Links, Photos, Video Clips and Gujarati News of Gir Wildlife Sanctuary (Geer / Gir Forest - Home of Critically Endangered Species Asiatic Lion; Gir Lion; Panthera Leo Persica ; Indian Lion (Local Name 'SAVAJ' / 'SINH' / 'VANRAJ') located in South-Western Gujarat, State of INDIA), Big Cats, Wildlife, Conservation and Environment.
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