Karnataka Launches Tiger Census 2026 Across All Forest Areas Starting Monday

Karnataka's Forest Minister Ishwar B Khandre announced the commencement of the Tiger Census-2026 starting Monday across all forest areas in the state. The census will be conducted in multiple phases, beginning with patrols collecting data on carnivores like tigers and leopards, followed by herbivore surveys to guide camera trap placement. The state, which ranked second in the country with an estimated 563 tigers in the last census, will utilize over 2,200 camera traps across its five tiger reserves for the assessment. The data will help determine the current tiger population and the carrying capacity of the state's forests.

Key Points: Karnataka Tiger Census 2026 Begins in State Forests

  • Census begins Monday in all forest areas
  • Multi-phase survey over several weeks
  • Aims to assess tiger population and forest capacity
  • Uses camera traps and field patrols
  • State ranked 2nd in India with 563 tigers in 2022
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Karnataka Tiger Census-2026 to begin on Monday in all forest areas: Environment Minister Ishwar B Khandre

Karnataka begins its 2026 tiger census across all forest divisions. The multi-phase survey will count tigers, leopards, elephants, and herbivores to assess population and forest capacity.

"If we see that tigers are coming to the country from the forest in large numbers, it is evident that there has been an increase in the number of tigers in the state this time. - Ishwar B Khandre"

Bidar, January 5

Karnataka Forest, Biology and Environment Minister Ishwar B Khandre stated that the Tiger Census-2026 will begin from Monday in all forest areas of the state, including Kali, Bhadra, Nagarhole, Bandipur and BRT Tiger Reserve.

This process will be carried out in all the 38 forest division patrols in each zone of the state's forest areas, for which training was given to the frontline personnel of all the 13 forest circles of the state and 5 tiger reserves separately in October-December last year.

Starting today, for 3 days, a team of 3 people will travel 5 km in the forest every day in all the patrols of the state and collect details of footprints, droppings, direct sightings of all carnivorous animals, including tigers and leopards and elephants.

Later, from January 15 to 17, the second phase of census estimation will be carried out in 14 forest divisions. Each team will travel in the forest and collect information on direct sightings of herbivorous animals, including deer, wild boar, bison, wild boar, etc., which will facilitate the decision on where to install camera traps, he said.

Khandare, in his statement, said that the census is being conducted across the country every four years, and this is the 6th such experiment. Earlier, the census was conducted in 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018 and 2022. It was estimated that there were about 563 tigers in the state, and the state ranked 2nd in the country in tiger population.

Tiger Project Director Ramesh Kumar has been nominated as the nodal officer for NTCA, who will be in charge of this assessment.

"Kumar has been asked to list the number of tigers and other carnivores in different areas; the quantity of herbivores in that section, and to identify the carrying capacity of the forest by understanding the number of tigers and herbivores in different forests," said Ishwar Khandre.

Using the data of carnivores collected in the 2nd phase survey, camera traps will be installed at appropriate places in the third phase, Khandare said, adding that the nearby tiger reserves where the camera trap survey has been completed will provide the cameras.

There are 2230 camera traps in 5 tiger reserves, and the camera trap survey has already been started in all 5 tiger reserves.

Out of these, Nagarhole Tiger Reserve (600 camera traps), Bandipur Tiger Reserve (550); BRT (300); He explained that there are (330) camera traps in Bhadra, (450) in Kali Tiger Reserve.

"If Bandipur Tiger Reserve provides cameras to Cauvery Wildlife Sanctuary, BRT will provide cameras to MM Hills Wildlife Sanctuary. Similarly, cameras will be provided to Madikeri Wildlife Division and Mysore Regional Division from Nagarhole Tiger Reserve," Khandare said.

Khandare added that the survey will be utilised to notify of the increase in the number of tigers in the state.

"If we see that tigers are coming to the country from the forest in large numbers, it is evident that there has been an increase in the number of tigers in the state this time. This will be known exactly from the census," he said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
This is wonderful news. Our forests are our heritage. However, I hope the census also looks at the human-animal conflict aspect. With more tigers, villages on the forest fringe face more challenges. Conservation must include protecting people's livelihoods too.
R
Rohit P
Fantastic! Bandipur and Nagarhole are jewels of our state. The sharing of camera traps between reserves is a smart, cost-effective move. Hope the numbers show a healthy increase. Jai Karnataka!
S
Sarah B
As someone who loves visiting these parks, this is encouraging. The systematic approach over 3 phases seems thorough. It's impressive how much planning goes into this every four years. Kudos to the forest department personnel.
V
Vikram M
Good step. But the article mentions training was given last year. I hope the data collection is consistent across all divisions. Sometimes remote forest areas don't get the same attention as popular tiger reserves. The true count depends on that.
K
Karthik V
Heartening to see such detailed planning. The tiger is not just an animal for us, it's a symbol of a healthy forest ecosystem. Hope the census shows our conservation efforts are working. All the best to the teams on the ground!

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