Kerala to estimate wild elephant and tiger populations
- February 26, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Kerala to estimate wild elephant and tiger populations
Subject: Environment
Section: Species in news
Context: The Kerala Forest department is set to launch surveys to enumerate wild elephant and tiger populations as part of its efforts to mitigate man-animal conflict in the State.
Tiger census
- The national tiger census is conducted once every four years.
- The Nation-wide tiger census was earlier held in 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018.
- The National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) conducts tiger censuses in partnership with state forest departments, conservation NGOs, and the Wildlife Institute of India (WII).
- Census methodology
- Double sampling based on ground-based surveys and actual images captured on camera-traps.
- Double sampling method was introduced in 2006 after the “pugmark” surveys were found to be inaccurate.
- In 2018 census, 83% of the big cats censused were individually photographed using camera traps.
- In Phases 1 & 2, ground-based surveys were carried out by Forest Department officials to collect signs of tiger presence like scat and pugmarks.
- In phase 3, the information was plotted on the forest map prepared with remote-sensing and GIS (MSTrIPES).
- In the last phase, data were extrapolated to areas where cameras could not be deployed.
Elephant census
- Elephant numbers largely rely on States directly counting the number of elephants.
- Elephants are counted once in five years.
- Census methodology
- The direct elephant counting method is based on sightings of elephants.
- In the indirect method, surveyors follow a dung decay formula for arriving at population estimation which is being used by Tamil Nadu and Karnataka at present.
- A variation of about 8% to 9% has been noticed between the two methods.