35 Spotted Dear Shifted To Kuno National Park From Kanha Tiger Reserve
In October, forest department will launch a special campaign to catch black bucks from Shajapur district and shift them to Kuno

35 Spotted Dear Shifted To Kuno National Park From Kanha Tiger Reserve |
Bhopal (Madhya Pradesh): Thirty five spotted deer were translocated to Kuno National Park from Kanha Tiger Reserve on Sunday. They were taken to Kuno in a specially designed vehicle. They will act as a prey base for cheetahs.
“Kanha has a large population of spotted deer,” deputy director, Kanha Tiger Reserve, Puneet Goyal told Free Press. According to a rough estimation, Kanha has 55,000 spotted deer.
Since last year till date, about 800 spotted deer have been shifted to Kuno National Park, Nauradehi Sanctuary and Gandhi Sagar National Park. Kanha has highest density of herbivore animals.
In October, forest department will launch a special campaign to catch black bucks from Shajapur district and shift them to Kuno National Park and Gandhi Sagar Sanctuary.
Groping in dark
Satpura Tiger Reserve officials are groping in dark to arrest persons involved in poaching of a fully grown tiger. They chopped off one of the paws of tiger killed through a snare. The carcass was found floating in the backwaters of Tawa river near a revenue village situated outside Tiger Reserve.
Sources said that forest officials have received some lead into the poaching case and they are focusing on the suspect, who remains at large. Senior forest officials are keeping a close eye on the ongoing investigation into the case and taking every minute information from Satpura forest officials.
RECENT STORIES
-
Indore News: Collector Shivam Verma Celebrate Diwali With Children And Employees -
Mumbai News: Jain Monk Nilesh Chandra Vijay To Begin Hunger Strike Post-Diwali Over Pigeon Feeding... -
Indore Govardhan Puja: Water Resources Minister Tulsiram Silawat, Collector Shivam Verma Worship Cow -
Bombay HC Imposes ₹50,000 Cost On Petitioner For Challenging Reserved NCLT Order -
MP News: Tribal Welfare Proposes Unified, Simplified Scholarship Schemes Across Departments