Abstract

Long-term monitoring of tiger population is essential in any human-dominated landscape as globally their population is showing a declining trend due to unrelenting stress or stochastic events. In view of that, Bengal tiger population was monitored in Pench Tiger Reserve (Pench), Madhya Pradesh of Central India between May 2006 and April 2013. The population, age-sex ratios, survival rate, growth rate, and recruitment pattern of adult (≥36 month), subadult (≥18 to 36 month), and cubs (≤15 month) were studied using camera trap and radio-telemetry techniques. Overall, tiger density ± SE/100 km2 using Maximum Likelihood Spatial Explicit Capture Recapture method was 5.5 ± 1.6 in first trapping period or year and 3.7 ± 0.8 in last or seventh trapping year. The estimated survival rate of all tiger (n = 66) was 0.66 (±0.04), whereas mean annual growth rate (±SE) was 1.15 (±0.11) i.e. 15%. The sex ratio (male/female) found to be female biased and more than 80% of overall recruitment was contributed by female tiger. The dispersal of subadults in the tiger population contributed gradual fluctuation in survival rate and annual growth rate, as resident adult tiger population remained almost stable over the study period. As the overall tigers are surviving in a small population size and operating at carrying capacity, the important corridors connecting with neighboring population of Kanha Tiger Reserve and Satpura Tiger Reserve may ensure constant emigration and immigration to reduce the chances of genetic drift or inbreeding in the Pench tiger population.

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