Tigers Face Local Extinction as Poverty, Mining and Deforestation Shrink Habitats
India celebrated tiger population may be rising on paper, but a troubling trend lies beneath tigers are vanishing from large parts of their historic range. A recent study published in Science reveals that between 2006 and 2018, the big cats went locally extinct from nearly 18,000 square kilometres of habitat across the country.
Half of reserves with fewer than 10 tigers
Despite decades of conservation efforts, almost half of India 58 tiger reserves now host fewer than 10 big cats, while three have none left at all. Researchers found that local extinctions peaked between 2006 and 2010, making up nearly two-thirds of recorded losses during that period. The pace slowed after 2010, but the trend remains alarming.
Interestingly, tigers also managed to expand into over 41,000 sq km of new...









