The herculean task to enumerate the endangered Asiatic lions in the Gir sanctuary here began today with the five-day long census undertaken by the Gujarat forest department.
"The lion census began today and will continue upto May 5 in Gujarat's five districts in and around Gir Sanctuary," the Principal Chief Conservator of Forest (PCCF) in Gujarat C N Pandey told PTI.
"This time a method of direct sighting or direct contact will be used to count lions. The earlier indirect evidence like pug-marks or scat will not be taken into account, thus giving 100 per cent results," Pandey said. Gir is the last abode of Asiatic Lions, where the species are found at present.
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The exercise will be conducted with 2,500 people that include 600 units of enumerators including wild-life experts, government officials, trackers, who tracks the behavioural pattern of lions, along with NGOs, added Pandey. Enumerators will also record unique identification marks like scars on face, its colour, shape of ears, tuft of hair on tail, he said. "The census will also take note of the lions' pride (a group or family of a lion) along with the individual," he said. "Today the teams have reached there and are engaged in the pre-sruvey exercise.
The first team will conduct the 24 hour exercise of counting the lions on May 2 which will return on May 3. While on May 4, another team will conduct the census exercise up to May 5. After consolidating the entire data, the final figure is likely to be announced on May 10," he said.