From year 2011 to 2016, as many as 89 tigers including 11 cubs died in the state due to various reasons including poaching, territorial clashes or for natural reasons as cited in the data obtained from the MP Forest Department.
The data revealed that 2012 witnessed the death of 16 felines which reduced to 11 next year (2013). Subsequent years proved more fatal for the wildcat when the state saw 14 and 15 deaths respectively in 2014 and 2015.
On an average, 14 tigers had died every year from 2012 to 2015, but the death toll went up to an alarming level of 33 in 2016.
As far as reasons are concerned, the death of 30 out of 89 tigers were attributed to the territorial clashes, while 22 of them have fallen prey to poachers, who killed them either by poisoning or through the electrocution.
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The remaining 37 tigers are cited to die either due to their old age, illness or some other reasons.
"The tiger population was reduced to 257, according to the census carried out by the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) in 2011. However in 2014, the tiger population in the state has gone up to 308," MP's Principal Chief Conservator of Forest (PCCF), Wildlife, Jitendra Agrawal told PTI.
Agrawal claimed that there are 216 tigers in only six tiger reserves of the state - Kanha, Bandhavgarh, Pench, Panna, Satpura and Sanjay National Park.
The tiger conservationists, however, find this rise in
deaths as negligence on part of the authorities.
"A task force constituted in 2005 by the Centre had recommended that the responsibility should be fixed in each case of unnatural death of the tiger. But this is not being done in the state," a Bhopal based tiger conservationist Ajay Dubey told