Kuno, India’s Second Home for the Asiatic Lion, Is Ready

The action plan aims to guide the reintroduction program of the Asiatic lions in Kuno in a manner based on science and pro-active management.

“Still waiting for new beginning”.

The words in bold, white, are painted alongside a mural of a lion and lioness, on a sign near the forest guest house in Palpur village inside the Kuno Palpur wildlife sanctuary in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh. The guest house overlooks Kuno river and offers a clear glimpse into the heart of the forest and the wildlife of the sanctuary. The sun shines bright on the landscape, welcoming a new day and perhaps the start of a new chapter for the sanctuary.

After more than two decades of roadblocks, the Kuno Palpur wildlife sanctuary is ready as the new home for Asiatic lions, starting with those that are to be relocated from Gujarat’s Gir sanctuary, currently the only home of the Asiatic lions in India. In a recent visit over two days, Mongabay-India witnessed the revamped sanctuary.

The areas of grassland habitat are ready to provide food for the animals that lions prey upon like nilgai (blue bull), chital (spotted deer), sambhar, chinkara. “The grass on the sites of the 24 villages that existed here and have already been relocated outside, as a part of the lion reintroduction program, have grown.  There is no sign of human habitat. The villages have been developed into large grasslands, making the sanctuary almost free from human habitation for the free and flexible movements of lions,” Vijendra Shrivastav, sub-divisional officer, Kuno Palpur (West) Wildlife Sanctuary told Mongabay-India as he spoke about the preparations of the sanctuary to receive lions from Gir wildlife sanctuary in Gujarat.

“We are asking just for two pride of lions that typically includes a male, three to five females and their young cubs. On successful relocation, the family of lions will access the unused habitats and will also increase the seasonal mast availability for wildlife in the sanctuary and diversity.”

It has been 29 years since Kuno Palpur was identified as the site for the relocation of Asiatic lions, from their last habitat in Gujarat, to protect them from extinction. Currently, there are 523 (as per the last census carried out in 2015) lions in Gir and this relocation project was supposed to have been completed by 2020.

The “Action plan for the reintroduction of the Asiatic lions (Panthera leo persica) in Kuno Wildlife Sanctuary – Draft 2016” prepared by the expert committee for translocations of lions from Gir to Kuno Sanctuary observed that the “last free-ranging population of approximately 523 Asiatic lions Panthera leo persica are found in the 22,000 square kilometre of the Gir landscape in Gujarat, western India. Carnivore populations restricted to single sites face a variety of extinction threats from genetic and stochastic environmental factors.” The draft is now under implementation.

Catastrophes such as an epidemic, an unexpected decline in prey, natural calamities or retaliatory killings could result in the extinction of the lion population when they are restricted to single populations, the action plan adds.

Reintroduction of Asiatic lions to an alternative site to ensure their long-term viability has become a major conservation agenda since the late-1950s. Failure of the first attempt of the Asiatic lion reintroduction in India (Chandraprabha Wildlife Sanctuary of Uttar Pradesh) in the 1960s has been ascribed to the lack of an a priori scientific study on lion prey base, habitat requirements, local people’s attitude and a post-release monitoring program, notes the plan.

In the early 1990s, after ecological assessment of some protected areas within the historical range of lions was undertaken, the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) identified Kuno Wildlife Sanctuary (Kuno WLS) in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh as the most potential reintroduction site.  Subsequently, between 1996 and 2001, 23 villages were resettled from inside the identified Kuno sanctuary by the Madhya Pradesh Forest Department (MPFD) and an area of about 1,280 square km was demarcated as Kuno wildlife division.

An Asiatic lion resting in the shade. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

A new home for the Asiatic lion is finally materialising

Located in north Madhya Pradesh, Kuno was one of the hunting grounds of the royal families of the region and was notified as a sanctuary in 1981. “The sanctuary is classified under the semi-arid – Gujarat Rajputana biogeographic zone,” a senior forest officer of the Madhya Pradesh’s forest department said.

According to Azad Singh Dabhas, a retired forest officer, “in the 1990s, the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) took up the matter of finding an alternative home for the species and identified Kuno Wildlife Sanctuary as the most suitable site.”

He explained that the idea was that in case of catastrophes such as an endemic, an unexpected decline in prey, natural calamities or retaliatory killings could result in the extinction of threatened species which are restricted to a single site – Gir National Park in Gujarat.

Between 1996 and 2001 the Madhya Pradesh Government relocated 23 villages containing 1,547 families from Kuno Sanctuary in preparation for the new lion population. “Not a single incidence of poaching and human-animal conflict has been reported in the last three years,” said a senior official of the sanctuary.

Though the sanctuary is inhabited by carnivores such as leopard, wolf, jackal, Indian fox and striped hyena, in the last over two decades, the population of chital, sambar, nilgai, chinkara, wild pig, chowsingha, and blackbuck are found in abundance.

“One of the major challenges was of the sites of the relocated villages to develop them into grasslands. The sites of the relocated villages have developed into large grasslands, extending in size to as much as 1,500 ha in some cases,” said Shrivastav.

According to Atul Chouhan, Kuno Sangharsh Samiti, “The state tourism department is successfully running a three-star hotel located on the Shivpuri Highway. A large number of visitors prefer to stay in the forest guest house, which is located inside the Kuno Reserve and is around 25 kilometres from the Tiktoli, the entry gate to the Kuno Reserve. Round the year more than 2,000 visitors come to Kuno Reserve. And the number of visitors to Kuno is rising up. If, lions are going to be introduced in Kuno Reserve the footfall is certainly going to rise.”

The Samiti, now with about 2,000 members, was formed by like-minded people of Sheopur district in 2009-10 after the Gujarat government refused to share lions. The Samiti, along with the forest dwellers who were shifted from the sanctuary have held protests, submitted memorandums to the government alleging that they sacrificed their ancestral homes and land in a way to provide a safe place for the lions. They demanded that the government should respect their sacrifice and take constructive efforts to introduce lions in Kuno Palpur.

Chouhan wants the government to involve youth of the villages in tourism activities by training them as field guides of the sanctuary.

From the 24 villages, a total of 1,545 families were affected. The villagers were relocated to Karhal tehsil of Sheopur district.

“We have left our ancestral homes, anticipating that we are doing it for a bigger cause by understanding the need of the government to provide a safe place for lions and conversation of our natural heritage. But, what we have received nothing in return. There are no signs of lions being introduced in the Kuno. The government has done injustice with us,” said Kapoor Singh Yadav, a resident of village Naya Paron situated on the Sheopur-Shivpuri State Highway.

Yadav, along with his family members and 50 odd families of village Paron, which was situated inside the Kuno Palpur Sanctuary, shifted to the new location in 2004.

Gujarat’s reluctance to relocate the lions

As per the action plan, the Standing Committee of the National Board for Wildlife (NBWL) endorsed the lion reintroduction program in Kuno. However, the proposal met with resistance from the Gujarat Forest Department (GFD) which was reluctant to provide founder lions from Gir for reintroduction purposes. An affidavit was also filed before the Supreme Court of India objecting the lion reintroduction.

Gujarat government has been refusing to give lions to Madhya Pradesh alleging that it would not be safe to shift the mighty beast to a state which has failed to protect its own tiger population.

After legal tangles spanning for almost two decades, the apex court finally gave its verdict in April 2013 and explicitly directed the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC), Government of India (GoI) to expedite the lion reintroduction in Kuno in compliance with the IUCN guidelines of carnivore reintroduction.

Accordingly, the 2016 draft action plan was developed under the directives of the Additional Director General (Wildlife) to guide a successful lion reintroduction in Kuno. The plan, now under implementation, enlists various ecological, biological, management and social facets in accordance with the IUCN/SSC guidelines to develop a time-bound protocol essential for implementing the reintroduction program. Some management actions recommended in the action plan are concomitant and should continue for long-term, it notes.

Gir in Gujarat is the last refuge of the Asian lion population. According to the 14th Lion Estimation Population Report, the lion population has increased by 27% from 411 in 2010 to 523 in 2015. The increase in lion numbers inside the protected area has been just 6% (as of 337 to 356), however, the rise outside has been higher 126% (from 74 to 167).

A large number of lions wander outside the Gir National Park in the eco-sensitive zone of the Gir Protected Area. In 2018, when the deaths of 23 lions in Gir took place, the Gujarat government maintained it to be a one-off incident. The government allegedly refused to touch and go in deep to dig out the medical analytical cause behind the deaths. After the incident, the Gujarat government launched a Rs 350 crore (Rs 3.5 billion) lion conservation project. The project was reviewed by Gujarat chief minister Vijay Rupani in July 2019, when, during rains visuals of lion frisking in the urban areas of Gir Forest hit social media.

A female Asiatic lion. Photo: Flickr/Gaurika Wijeratne CC BY NC ND 2.0

The reintroduction plan 

The expert committee has suggested a four-phase plan for the reintroduction of lion in Kuno which involves organisational commitments, ecological monitoring and quantifying social carrying capacity of lion reintroduction, followed by capture, translocation and soft release of lions in Kuno, post-reintroduction monitoring & research, conflict mitigation, followed with an annual review of the project. The first three phases would be undertaken over a period of two years, after which, upto the next 20 years or so the plan highlights genetic management & supplementation, under which six lions (two males and four females) should be supplemented in the Kuno population from Gir until 16-20 years from the first reintroduction at an interval of 4 years.

The report maintains, carnivore reintroduction is an appropriate conservation strategy to restore the integrity of ecosystems. However, many pitfalls exist that can result in the total or partial failure of a reintroduction program and can potentially waste valuable and limited resources.

Population could reach capacity of 80 individuals in 30 years

According to Kuno divisional forest officer, current habitat management initiatives by Madhya Pradesh Forest Department (MPFD) inside Kuno WLS such as weed eradication, fire management, grassland management, waterhole management etc. would continue so as to enhance nutritional carrying capacity for wild ungulates, which would serve as a prey base for the lions

Although the current carrying capacity of lions at Kuno WLS is a maximum of 40 lions, Population Habitat Viability Analysis (PHVA) models for Kuno lions show that the lion population will be viable for long- term only at a minimum figure of around 80 individuals.

Expecting approximately a realised growth that has been observed for recovering tiger populations, along with supplementation every four years from Gir; the lion population in Kuno WLS should reach the current carrying capacity of 40 within 15 years.

To reach the required self-sustaining population size of 80 lions, the time required would be close to 30 years.

This article was first published on Mongabay India.

Gir Lions Attack Forest Officials Team, Kill One

The incident prompted forest officials to close the safari park for tourists while two lions were caught and caged.

New Delhi: A lion attack left one person dead and two injured in the Devalia Safari Park in Gujarat’s Junagadh district on November 29.

Forest officers said that at around 11 am, a lion first attacked a labourer, identified as Rajnish Keshwala, who was keeping watch on animal movement, and dragged him inside the park Thursday morning.

According to sources, since the two most experienced lion trackers were on leave, Keshwala was covering them. When another labourer, Dinesh Kacha, tried to rescue him, more lions attacked him as well. However, Kacha managed to escape and alerted forest officials. They mounted a search operation for Keshwala.

“When Keshwala’s body was being recovered, the lions attacked one of the foresters, Meraman Bharda,” said Dushyant Vasavada, the chief conservator of forests (CCF). “This is an extremely rare event. We are trying to ascertain in what circumstances the lions attacked the trackers,” he added.

Also Read: With Two More Lions Dead in Gir, Toll Reaches 23

The incident prompted forest officials to close the safari park for tourists and the two lions were caught and put in a cage. Akshay Kumar Saxena, the principal chief conservator of forests and the chief wildlife warden of Gujarat, ordered the Junagadh CCF to conduct an inquiry into the incident.

Earlier, the carcass of a lioness between nine and twelve years of age, had been found at the Tulsishyam Range of the forest near Amreli district.

In a short span of time, several big cats had died in Gir and six lion cubs were found dead in different parts of the forest on separate occasions. Following an outbreak of canine distemper virus infections in September, 36 lions had been captured and shifted to three rescue centres as a precautionary measure.

Gir Lions Vaccinated in an Attempt to Prevent Further Deaths

As many as 23 lions have died in Gujarat’s Gir sanctuary in less than a month, most of them succumbing to the canine distemper virus.

Ahmedabad: The Gujarat forest department, on Sunday, started vaccination of lions in the Gir sanctuary to protect them from a deadly virus blamed for the death of some of the big cats in their last abode.

As many as 23 lions have died in Gujarat’s Gir sanctuary in less than a month. Most of them have succumbed to canine distemper virus (CDV) and protozoa infections, forest officials had said.

The lions, an endangered species, are being vaccinated under intensive veterinary care and as per standard protocol, officials said Sunday.

CDV is considered a dangerous virus and had been blamed for wiping out 30% population of African lions in East African forests.

“Vaccination of segregated #Lions under intensive veterinary care as per standard protocol started. Top national & International lion experts have been consulted. Government undertaking utmost care for lion safety,” the Chief Conservator of Forest, Wildlife Junagadh, an official twitter handle of the Junagadha district forest department, said.

Also read: With Two More Lions Dead in Gir, Toll Reaches 23

The Gir sanctuary falls under the Junagadh district forest department’s jurisdiction.

A senior government official in Gandhinagar said only those lions which are in the forest department’s captivity are being vaccinated at present.

Following the death of big cats, the forest department had captured 36 lions and shifted them to Jashadhar and Jamwala rescue centres in the Gir forest as a precautionary measure.

After the CDV spread was confirmed in Asiatic lions, the state government had urgently imported 300 shots of the vaccine against the virus from the US.

CDV is mainly found in wild dogs, jackals and wolves. The disease can be contracted by lions if they eat any animal infected by it.

CDV is a highly contagious disease that attacks the immune system and other vital organs in animals. In most of the cases, the infection is fatal.

According to the last census conducted in 2015, the number of lions in the Gir sanctuary stood at 523.

Gir Lion Deaths: Gujarat Forest Department Forms 64 Teams to Screen and Rescue Lions

The carcasses of 11 lions, including cubs, were found between September 11 and 19. The preliminary cause of death has been identified as infighting and the resultant infection.

Read The Wire‘s editorial on the deaths here.

Ahmedabad: The Gujarat forest department has formed 64 teams to screen and shift sick lions to rescue centres after carcasses of 11 big cats were found in the state’s Gir forest, a senior official said on Sunday.

The carcasses of 11 lions, including cubs, were found between September 11 and 19. Nine of those were recovered from Dalkhaniya range and two from the Jashadhar range of Gir forest.

A team comprising top officials and experts from the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NCTA) and Dehradun-based Wildlife Institute of India (WII) has been probing the deaths since arriving here on Saturday. In its preliminary report, it said the deaths were mainly due to infighting and infection caused by resultant injuries.

Additional chief secretary (forest) Rajiv Gupta told reporters on Sunday in Junagadh that viscera samples of the 11 lion carcasses had been sent to Pune-based National Institute of Virology (NIV) to find out the exact cause of death.

“After analysing the NIV reports, we will devise a long-term strategy to save lions,” he said, adding the Central team had concluded that the deaths were not due to “unnatural” causes, such as intentional poisoning by humans.

He informed reporters that NTCA-WII team would remain in the state for a few more days to thoroughly probe the case.

Gupta said 64 teams with 270 personnel had been formed to screen lions in Gir forest.

“Each team has a forester, two beat guards and one tracker. Veterinary doctors will assist these teams in identifying and rescuing sick lions and treat them at our rescue centres. We have also planned to vaccinate cattle near Gir area,” the additional chief secretary (forest) said.

He said these teams would work under the supervision of principal chief conservator of forest (PCCF), Wildlife, Akshay Saxena.

The state government had on Friday claimed that three lion cubs were killed by a male lion to establish dominance and two lionesses and an adult lion died from respiratory and hepatic (relating to the liver) failure.

The post-mortem reports of five other lions, including two cubs and one lioness, were awaited, the forest department had said on Friday.

According to a 2015 census, Gir is home to 523 lions, including 109 male, 201 female, 73 sub-adults and 140 cubs.

(PTI)

Editorial: Gujarat’s Asmita Is India’s Pride

Once found in many parts of India, spread towards Haryana in the north, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, the historic range of the lion is today just Gujarat’s Gir.

Within a week, 12 Asiatic lions have died in the Gir landscape. The reasons reported are multi-faceted – lion infighting, the spread of a lung infection and poisoning. In a nutshell, these are the threats that face large cats in India. Yet the case of lions in Gujarat is markedly different from the more widespread tigers. All the Asiatic lions of the world exist today in the single landscape of the Gir. Once found in many parts of India, spread towards Haryana in the north, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, the historic range of the lion is today just Gujarat’s Gir.

Asking for an “ecocentric approach” that had the “species best-interest standard” in mind, the Supreme Court had in 2013 asked Gujarat to allow lions to repopulate in another habitat. The judgment was far-reaching from both national as well as ecological perspectives: it thought about inter-generational equity, the genetic future of the species and the fact that India, not just Gujarat, should be a steward for the Asiatic lion. Genetic depression and threats of epidemics are high when any population is restricted to a small location.

While Gujarat has worked hard on lion conservation, it also seems its effort is only for its lions. The Asiatic lions are now called ‘Gir lions’ by the state. In constructing tourism, identity and regional pride around what the state calls ‘Gujarati Asmita,’ the state government has refused to part with any lions or partake in a much broader scientific strategy for lion conservation.

At the same time, the recent lion deaths demonstrate that Gir National Park is not a sufficient habitat for the big cats. Lions have been seen all over the Gir landscape as well as in towns. They have died being hit by trains and falling into wells. Videos of lions crossing highways and negotiating linear barriers like roads are becoming common. New modes of survival are also emerging: lions have been seen on the Gujarat coastline next to the sea. It is unclear how long the coexistence will continue; several illegal practices like baiting wild lions for fun have also come to light.

The Wildlife Institute of India and the Madhya Pradesh forest department had worked on restoring the lion habitat in Madhya Pradesh’s Kuno-Palpur sanctuary. Trapped in a web of state politics – despite both MP and Gujarat being BJP-ruled – the reserve awaits lions. The ecological hope is that if lions are translocated to Madhya Pradesh, the population will survive any epidemics or disease that could strike Gir, and eventually aid genetic robustness through the colonisation of a new habitat. While neither conservational nor judicial directions have guided Gujarat’s hand thus far, the death of a dozen lions should end the parochialism. Giving lions to a historic range is not a defeat for Gujarat. It will be a nod to its stewardship.