City
Epaper

Rhino carcass in Manas National Park: Authorities say animal died due to infighting

By IANS | Updated: August 3, 2023 00:05 IST

Guwahati, August 2 A one-horned rhino carcass was found at Assam’s Manas  National Park and Tiger Reserve, officials ...

Open in App

Guwahati, August 2 A one-horned rhino carcass was found at Assam’s Manas  National Park and Tiger Reserve, officials said on Wednesday.

However, the authorities turned down the possibility of any attempt of poaching behind the rhino’s death.

Vaibhav Mathur, the director of Manas National Park and Tiger Reserve told IANS, “It was a female rhino which was actively monitored. It got injured due to infighting with a male rhino a few days ago and after July 23 it was not detected during the daily inspection of the forest staff.”

Later, the carcass of the rhino was discovered on July 31 night.

“The nasal bone of the rhino was intact and therefore there were no chances of a poaching attempt being made on the rhino,” Mathur said.

The long Bodo agitation in Assam had an opposing impact on the state’s Manas National Park and Tiger Reserve. During that time, this National Park was under severe threat, and rhinos were completely wiped out from the park.

Along with the unrest, a lot of other things were also happening in Manas that actually violated the Standard Operation Procedures (SOP) laid down by the NTCA to run tiger reserves in the country.

Mathur said; “Night stays were happening in the core area, making noises within the forest, plying of the numerous private cars, vehicles from Bhutan were using Manas as a highway, etc. All of these resulted in the tigers and other animals leaving Manas National Park.”

However, since the return of peace to the Bodoland region, Manas National Park and Tiger Reserve has been slowly recovering its earlier position.

“There are around 55 rhinos, most of them were shifted here either from Kaziranga National Park or Pobitora sanctuary. During the monsoon floods in Kaziranga, a few rhinos became orphaned and they were taken care of by the forest authorities. Later, they were sent to Manas National Park,” the officer added.

The authorities of the park used radio collars to identify the rhinos. Along with that camera trapping, transect distance sampling techniques prescribed by the National Tiger Conservation Authority were used to keep a watch on the rhinos here.

“Since the rhino population was not so high, we also used the direct sitting procedure, where the rhinos are watched by the forest staff on a daily basis and they report it in the evening,” Mathur said.

“However, the rhino which unfortunately died, has been missing in direct sighting since July 24 and it sent a worrying signal.”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: congresspitrodadelhimodideepikabjpwest-bengaldeepika-padukoneajay-devgnthakur
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi Shocker: 24-year-old Man Stabbed To Death, Following Drunken Quarrel Over Money, Accused Arrested

NationalBJP Parliamentary Board To Meet on Aug 17, Discussion Likely on Vice Presidential Candidate

NationalDelhi Tragedy: 5 Dead, 11 Rescued After Roof collapse at Dargah Sharif Patte Shah near Humayun's Tomb

NationalGhaziabad Horror: Two Bikers Dies In Head-on Collusion While Performing Dangerous Stunt on Delhi-Dehradun Expressway , Disturbing Video Emerges

ThaneThane: Congress, Other Groups Protest KDMC’s Meat Sale Ban on Independence Day (VIDEO)

National Realted Stories

NationalJP Nadda Announces Maharashtra Governor CP Radhakrishnan as NDA’s Nominee for Vice President of India

NationalDrones to be used for emergency medical aid at TVK's second state conference in Madurai

NationalBJP names Maharashtra Governor P. Radhakrishnan as Vice Presidential candidate in 'Tamil Nadu outreach'

NationalBJP counters Congress allegations on voter rolls, says Rahul Gandhi peddling ‘lies’

NationalMadhya Pradesh weather alert: Very heavy rain, thunderstorms likely in several districts