Gujarat has also noted in its affidavit that the “more opportunistic” tiger will not let lions flourish in the same habitat.
“With future effective conservation measures, the stated policy goal of tiger conservation, more tiger movements are likely to take place (in Kuno, the forest area proposed for the lions). This is a very serious issue which requires immediate consideration and with a possibility of serious conflict between two top predators of similar capabilities in the one spatio-temporal frame,” the affidavit says.
Experts, however, say that tigers and lions have always coexisted in India. “Historically, lions and tigers have lived together in India. This is unique because the other species of lion are in Africa, which has no tigers,” said National Tiger Conservation Authority Member Secretary Rajesh Gopal speaking earlier to The Indian Express.
The Ministry of Environment and Forests had earlier asked the Wildlife Institute of India to identify a suitable habitat for resettlement of lions and Kuno — a 3,000 sq km reserve forest — was chosen. This was reiterated by the Population of Habitat Viability Analysis, an international group. With the project on the backburner for many years, the Central Zoo Authority has even chalked out a plan to introduce zoo-bred lions in Kuno. However, such a plan would take a long time to implement, as it would involve releasing a third generation of captive lions — gradually weaned away from human dependence — into the wild.
“Lions need to be moved from Gujarat. The argument of lions and tigers fighting in this case doesn’t hold. As both are large predators, they will not co-occur in the same forest, but in the same region. Kuno does not have a large population of tigers, but only a small number of transient tigers from Ranthambhore. Extensions of the Gir sanctuary, which have been made in Mitiyala and Girnar do not protect from the threat of epidemic extension. The point is to create another population far away from Gir. Though Kuno can be improved as a habitat, it is still the best choice for relocation of lions in India,” says Qamar Qureshi, from the Wildlife Institute of India (WII).
... contd.