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Tigers of North-Eastern India - Printable Version

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RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - parvez - 04-09-2019

https://www.apnnews.com/efforts-on-for-safe-return-of-the-straying-royal-bengal-from-orang-tiger-reserve-project/


RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - Rishi - 04-21-2019










Tigers from Orang? - Ashutosh - 05-07-2019

Hello, 
I am new here and I was wondering if anyone has any pictures of tigers from Orang? Afterall, if a tiger reserve has a better tiger density than Kaziranga, they must be doing something right.


RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - Rishi - 05-07-2019

(05-07-2019, 06:16 AM)Ashutosh Wrote: Hello, 
I am new here and I was wondering if anyone has any pictures of tigers from Orang? Afterall, if a tiger reserve has a better tiger density than Kaziranga, they must be doing something right.

Welcome to the forum!

There are several photos (mostly camera-trapped) of Orang tigers on this thread. See through older posts...


RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - parvez - 06-18-2019

Kaziranga tiger,

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RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - Rishi - 06-24-2019

Tiger crossing a lake in Kaziranga 

©Wild Dreams

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RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - Rishi - 06-25-2019

Assam, Bengal forest officials arrest five for killing tiger

June 25, 2019
SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT



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GUWAHATI: The Royal Bengal tiger’s territory straddled the India-Bhutan border. Forest officials of two neighbouring States, Assam and West Bengal, came together to catch five persons for killing a Royal Bengal tiger whose territory straddled the India-Bhutan border.
The tiger, probably poached in Assam's Manas tiger reserve, was among an estimated 20 that had a dual identity; it carried the MNP 059M tag as an ‘Indian’ tiger and TMT 063M as an ‘international’ tiger.

MNP expands to Manas National Park and TMT to Transboundary Manas Tiger covering about 400 sq km along the border between India and Bhutan. While MNP in western Assam measures 500 sq km, the adjoining Royal Manas National Park in Bhutan measures 1,000 sq km.

Officer’s tip-off

“We received a tip-off from a range officer in West Bengal about smugglers having hidden the tiger’s skin, teeth and bones in Runikhata area of [Assam’s] Chirang district. We picked up the lead and arrested five people from Srirampur on the Assam-West Bengal border last week,” a forest officer in MNP said.
The tiger was killed along the India-Bhutan border a month ago.
West Bengal forest officials had come to know that the poachers had contacted potential buyers in northern West Bengal or Nepal and wanted to sell the skin for ₹15 lakh. Posing as buyers, they got in touch with the poachers who agreed to meet them at Srirampur.
“The West Bengal forest officers informed us and we laid in wait for the poachers to come to sell the tiger body parts to us,” the MNP officer said.
The five — Prabhat Narzary, Ishaq Narzary, Dimbeshwar Roy, Binadeep Roy, and Bibalan Narzary — did not carry the tiger skin with them but revealed where they had hidden it as well as other body parts of the carnivore.

More vulnerable

“Tigers of Indian part of Manas are more vulnerable than those in Bhutan that can prey at 4,000m above sea level too. The transboundary tigers are equally vulnerable, and the poachers are usually from Assam,” said Firoz Ahmed of Assam-based green group Aaranyak.
The Transboundary Manas Conservation Authority, an India-Bhutan joint initiative, had estimated 18 transboundary tigers during 2015-16 fiscal, 17 during 2016-17, and 20 during 2017-18.


RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - Rishi - 06-28-2019

https://www.livescience.com/31872-tigers-thriving-india-park-images.html

Credit: TCRI/Aaranyak

A tiger in India's Kazaringa National Park carries a hog deer. The small deer are like chicken for a tiger, providing about 65 pounds (30 kilograms) of meat, said conservation biologist Firoz Ahmed.

*This image is copyright of its original author

A female tiger with two cubs. The third tiger may be the cub's father, said conservation biologist Firoz Ahmed. Female tigers mate with several males to prevent infanticide after they bear litters, he said.

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A heavily pregnant tigress passes in front of a camera trap in Kaziranga National Park in India.

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RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - Rishi - 07-07-2019

Manas tigress. 
https://suvayupaul.wordpress.com/2019/02/25/rendezvous-with-the-golden-eye-myth-demystified-at-manas/


*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author



RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - parvez - 07-07-2019

Regarding post 219, those pictures are true indicators for stickiness and muscularity of north east tigers. A tiger can easily consume a whole small deer which can weigh only around 40 lbs or so. But a human can't easily consume a chicken. That is some ridiculous comparison from a biologist who isn't as experienced and lacks proper knowledge and who doesn't reply to any questions relating to field experience. He isn't as authentic as others imo.


RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - Roflcopters - 07-07-2019

that’s a nice coat on her! beautiful looking girl. tfs


RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - parvez - 07-16-2019

Manas tigers,

*This image is copyright of its original author


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RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - parvez - 07-17-2019

The bulkiness of nameri tiger,

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RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - parvez - 07-17-2019

Siberian tigers in arunachal pradesh??

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RE: Tigers of North-Eastern India - Ashutosh - 07-17-2019

Mr.Rijeju needs some awareness about tigers. Those are most definitely not Siberian tigers. Possibly, Bengal or Indochinese or some sort of mix. If high level officials are so ignorant and spreading misinformation, we have many unnecessary problems.

Did he tweet this today? Because this came out last year. Plus, the Mishmi tribe have been living with the tigers for centuries and have their life philosophies based around the interaction with tigers.