Bhupender Yadav leads tiger re-introduction workshop in Alwar, Sariska at 56 tigers
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Minister for Environment, Forest and Climate Change Bhupender Yadav on Sunday, 28 June inaugurated a National Workshop on 'Tiger Re-introduction: Opportunities and Challenges' in Alwar, Rajasthan, marking 18 years of tiger reintroduction at Sariska Tiger Reserve. The minister underscored that tiger conservation extends beyond protecting a single species — it encompasses forests, watersheds, biodiversity, and the welfare of local communities.
What the Workshop Covers
The workshop brought together field directors, wildlife experts, and chief wildlife wardens from tiger landscapes across India and their respective states. Its focus is on the key management aspects of tiger reintroduction and augmentation programmes, drawing from ongoing conservation efforts to foster knowledge exchange for future initiatives.
Sariska: A Global Conservation Milestone
Yadav described the Sariska Tiger Reintroduction Programme as a historic milestone — widely recognised as the world's first successful scientific reintroduction of tigers into a landscape where the species had become locally extinct. Sariska recorded a complete local extinction in 2005 and now supports 56 tigers, a recovery the minister called a global model for species restoration through scientific management and community participation.
India's Broader Tiger Conservation Record
The minister highlighted that the number of tiger reserves in India has grown from 46 to 58 over the past decade. India has also met the St. Petersburg Declaration target of doubling its wild tiger population by 2022, ahead of the global deadline. Successful reintroductions at Panna and Sariska were, according to Yadav, made possible by active community support — a factor he contrasted with the Satkosia Tiger Reserve in Odisha, where a similar programme could not be sustained due to the absence of local backing.
Community Participation and Landscape Connectivity
Yadav stressed that tourist promotion and community welfare must receive equal priority in conservation planning. He also noted that in landscapes where tigers and elephants share overlapping ranges, maintaining and strengthening landscape connectivity is critical. The minister cited Project Cheetah as another example where community participation has been a key driver of progress.
What's Next
The workshop is expected to produce actionable frameworks for tiger reintroduction and augmentation, with learnings from Sariska and Panna likely to inform future reserve-level decisions. With 58 tiger reserves now operational, the focus is shifting from population recovery to long-term habitat management and human-wildlife coexistence.