PIONEER
BEAR REINTRODUCTION PROJECT MOVES INTO SECOND PHASE
PAKHUI, October 30, 2002: The six of them will
have to bear it just a little more. Two of them have
been helped take a step closer to wilderness; the others
are just biding their time. The six in question are
Himalayan black bear cubs. Housed at the Itanagar Zoo,
two have them have been moved to the rehabilitation
centre created for them at the Pakhui Wildlife Sanctuary
in the northeastern state of Arunachal Pradesh. The
four others are awaiting their turn at the zoo.
Arunachal
Pradesh is a biodiversity hotspot having a high diversity
of wildlife. Seventyfive per cent of the state's landscape
is covered by a mosaic of different forest types. Threats
to these forests are increasing from anthropogenic pressures
like slash and burn agriculture, communication, development,
human settlement, and tourism, leading to habitat fragmentation,
degradation, and destruction. This indiscriminate and
mindless destruction of Arunachal's forests has become
the biggest threat to its wildlife.
But the case of the Himalayan black bear (Ursus thibetanus),
found in large numbers around the Itanagar Wildlife
Sanctuary in Arunachal Pradesh, is unique. Tribesmen
kill semi-hibernating bears for meat and fur, and the
cubs are "rescued" (read, picked up) to be
kept as pets at home for children to play with. As they
grow larger they become aggressive and therefore, handed
over to the zoos. The practice came to the notice of
Sunil Subba, a Project Officer with Wildlife Trust of
India, who along with the then divisional forest officer
of the Pakke wildlife sanctuary, C. Loma, decided to
take up the cause of the cubs.
Sunil, while on other duties, trekked from village
to village, and with the help of aware residents and
local NGOs, tried to persuade the tribals, who still
retained them, to give up the bear cubs. This persistence
started having an impact on the villagers who saw sense
in the reasoning. The Zoological Park in the state capital
of Itanagar has thereafter been receiving a 2-5 month-old
bear cubs from the adjoining Itanagar Wildlife Sanctuary
frequently.
The Itanagar Zoo currently has six such bears (three
males and three females) of varying age groups. Two
of them are only three months old. Two females are eight
months old and the rest are between 2-4 years of age.
They are being maintained in sub-optimal enclosures
due to the lack of funds. As a result, the bears may
lose their conservation and reintroduction potential
due to behavioural problems caused by diseases, emotional
deprivation, inadequate veterinary care, nutritional
imbalance, and poor hygiene.
Wildlife
Trust of India along with the Government of Arunachal
Pradesh, has been trying to address this problem by
creating a rehabilitation and release site for this
species in Arunachal Pradesh. Bear rehabilitation has
not been attempted in India perhaps due to the potential
of bear-human conflict following release. However, brown
bears, American black bears and Himalayan black bears
have been successfully rehabilitated and released elsewhere.
WTI, in collaboration with the forest department of
Arunachal Pradesh, is establishing a site in Pakhui
Wildlife Sanctuary for keeping the six bears currently
and for any more bears, which may be rescued in the
future. Work on the rehabilitation site is scheduled
to begin in November 2002. All efforts will be made
to eliminate unnecessary human contact.
The three-year-project project, a joint initiative
of WTI and the Arunachal Pradesh department of environment
and forests, will be supervised by Dr Ruben Solomon,
a biologist who has been appointed as Project Manager.
Mr C Loma, Deputy Chief Wildlife Warden, Government
of Arunachal Pradesh, is the Project Leader. The department
will provide the logistics and facilitate the smooth
conduct of the project. The initial funds for setting
up the rehabilitation project site came from the animal
welfare division, Union ministry of statistics and programme
implementation. The British High Commission has agreed
to bear the bulk of the recurring costs over the next
three years.
Since many of these bears have been in captivity for
varying periods of time, they would need a soft release
programme. The rescued bears will be subsequently rehabilitated
and released in Eagle Nest Wildlife Sanctuary. The most
important aspect of any bear rehabilitation is the elimination
of human contact. Eagle's Nest is an isolated area with
negligible human population. Here, bears will be confined
in the most natural environment and the most natural
diet possible.
The first four bears to be released will be radio-collared
for post-release monitoring. All restockings and reintroductions
will conform to the IUCN/SSC guidelines laid down by
the Reintroduction Specialist Group.
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