| Dr. Y.V. Jhala and Qamar Qureshi |
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Qamar Qureshi's career as faculty with the WII began in 1993. Earlier, he obtained an M.Phil in Wildlife Biology from the Aligarh Muslim University. He is an expert in Geographical Information System and Remote Sensing. He has done extensive research in the Terai, Central Indian Highlands and the Trans-Himalaya ranging from community ecology to species biology. He has a special interest in landscape ecology. Jhala and Qureshi worked jointly on behalf of the WII and the National Tiger Conservation Authority to enumerate India’s tiger populations. The resultant report revealed a disturbingly low official figure of 1,411 tigers and has resulted in several fresh conservation initiatives that are expected to give the tiger an extra edge on life. Ranthambhore-Sariska Tiger Relocation Team, Rajasthan for the delicate and very difficult task of relocating tigers from Ranthambhore to SariskaSomewhere between July and November 2004, the last tiger in Sariska was killed. Three years and seven months later, an ambitious reintroduction project was implemented and two tigers from Ranthambhore were translocated back into Sariska (see Sanctuary Vol. XXVIII No. 5, October 2008). Carefully coordinated and executed team work made the translocation possible and this involved both senior officials and foot soldiers on whom the success or failure of most wildlife conservation efforts is dependent. The tiger translocation involved coordination between the state government, scientists, forest officials and local people. The plan was jointly prepared by the WII and the Rajasthan Forest Department. WII scientists handled the Ranthambhore tranquillisation and the Sariska recovery of tigers and WWF-India helped to obtain satellite collars to keep track of the released cats. The Chief Wildlife Warden of Rajasthan, R.N. Mehrotra, credits his field staff and Rajasthan’s political and administrative leadership with this successful first step and requested that the citation and award be accepted by four members of his field staff on behalf of the Rajasthan Forest Department. |
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