India Airlifts 2 Tigers to National Reserve


(AP Photo) :: A three-year-old tiger is seen Sunday, June 29, 2008 at Sariska Tiger Reserve in the western state of Rajasthan, India, after being shifted from Ranthambore. In an unprecedented attempt to revive the tiger population in western India, authorities airlifted a female tiger Friday, July 4, 2008 to the national reserve where it will join a male tiger that was delivered there last week.


Updated: 7/4/2008

JAIPUR, India

In an unprecedented attempt to revive the tiger population in western India, authorities airlifted a female tiger to a national reserve Friday where it will join a male tiger delivered there last week.

The tigers were carried by Indian Air Force helicopters to Sariska Tiger Reserve in the western state of Rajasthan, whose entire tiger population has been wiped out by poachers in the last five years.

Poaching and a vanishing habitat have savaged Indian tigers, which were believed to number in the tens of thousands a century ago. The tiger population has dropped from nearly 3,600 five years ago to about 1,400, according to the latest tiger census in February.

Environmentalists hailed the airlifting of the tigers from Ranthambore Tiger Reserve, one of India's most popular places for tourists to see tigers, to Sariska.

''The killing off of the entire population in Sariska was devastating, but we hope the reintroduction of the species in this reserve will spawn a new population and ultimately expand the region where tigers can grow and flourish,'' said Sybille Klenzendorf, director of WWF's Species Conservation Program.

The male tiger was airlifted to Sariska last Saturday and is doing well, said R.N. Mehrotra, chief wildlife warden of Rajasthan.

Both tigers were outfitted with radio collars so wildlife authorities can monitor them in the reserve.

If their introduction to Sariska goes well, authorities will consider bringing more tigers there, Mehrotra said.

The government has proposed the creation of a Tiger Protection Force that would combat poachers. While the special force is not yet in place, Mehrotra said wildlife officials would do their best to protect the new tigers in Sariska.

''Tiger numbers are dwindling at an alarming rate and it is imperative we take action now to keep them from disappearing altogether,'' Klenzendorf said.


Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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