Jaipur: The six-year-old TiGress T-99 has given birth to a child at Ranthambore Tiger Reserve (RTR).
With this, the large cat population in reserves has risen to 78.
Pictures of tigers with a child are captured in a trap camera in the Halonda area in the Zone-10 Rtr.
An official said, “This is the first garbage of Tigress, which is the T-60 daughter.
Monitoring in the area has increased.” The child was around three months old.
Ranthambore Tiger Reserve-1 has 20 adult men, 30 tigers of adult women and 28 of their children.
“The news was happy, however, increasing the tiger population in reserves meaning space for large cats declined.
Ranthambore Reserve has a core area of 392 SQKM with a buffer zone of 1,342 square kilometers.
Of the total area of more than 1,700 SQKM in RTR, only 600 SQKM can be used by tigers.
according to rough estimates, male tigers need around 25 SQKM and females around 15 SQKM.
The tiger population continues to increase in the state.
In November, the T-63 was seen with three twins in Chinawali over in the range of chhandar.
When tigers in reserve squeezed for the region because of high density, the head of the forest conservator (CCF) has submitted a proposal to relocate six of them.
Three tigers and three tigresses are used to shift and proposals sent to the head of wildlife (CWLW).
This list consists of Male Tigers T-113 , T-121 and T-123 and Tigers Women T-119, T-124 and T-126.
The source said that senior forest officials were divided into mass Ah this is to shift tigers after receiving a proposal.
“There is a view that tigers should not be shifted from Ranthambore who are afraid of territorial fights.
Territorial fights will always occur in nature and the Ministry of Forestry may not intervene in the process,” said a source.