| Dhaka suspends tiger collaring project |
|
|
|
| Friday, 07 March 2008 | |
|
Bangladesh has asked conservationists to stop attaching radio collars to wild tigers while it investigates the deaths of two of the endangered animals Mark Dummett Bangladesh has asked conservationists to stop attaching radio collars to wild tigers while it investigates the deaths of two of the endangered animals. The project defended its work, saying the tigers probably died of old age. “People should be careful of any kind of invasive method, such as injecting the tiger with chemicals,” Mr Hossein told the BBC. “We just don’t know what the affect of Telazol is on the tigers.” Adam Barlow of the Sundarbans Tiger Project, which monitors and protects the 300-500 tigers of Bangladesh’s giant Sundarbans mangrove forest, dismissed Mr Hossein’s theory of why the tigers died. “There is little, or possibly no, evidence available that categorically proves Telazol to be harmful to tigers,” he said. “The use of tranquilisers is not controversial. When this is done properly there is no problem,” he said. “Telazol is a veterinary prescription-only anaesthetic licensed in numerous countries exclusively for use in domestic dogs and cats,” Tom Lenz, the vice-president of Fort Dodge’s Animal Health department said. The longest running field study of tigers has taken place in eastern Russia. There, the US-based World Conservation Society says it has sedated and radio collared over 60 tigers with no ill-effects. “Based on our 16-year project in Russia, we believe the information gained is worth the risk.” While Bangladesh’s Forestry Department looks into the allegations, he says he has stopped work on a project to attach a radio-collar to a tiger that has killed over 60 domestic animals and one person since last April. Mr Barlow hopes that once it is collared the people living in Chandpai village will be able to follow its movements and so prevent any more attacks. He says that a similar project to collar lions in Kenya has greatly reduced attacks on livestock and lions there. |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
| Caretaker government and its obligationsMahmud HasanTHE caretaker government has repeatedly confirmed its commitment to holding the upcoming parliamentary election in December this year.... + Full Story |
| More . . . |