Infighting kills third Kaziranga tiger within a fortnight


Kaziranga Tiger Deaths — Infighting & Population Pressure

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-III (Environment & Biodiversity)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Full Name Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve (KNPTR)
Location Golaghat & Nagaon districts, Assam
Area ~430 sq km (core); ~1,307 sq km (with buffer)
Established as NP 1974 (Wildlife Protection Act, 1972)
Tiger Reserve 2006 (under WPA Amendment Act, 2006)
UNESCO World Heritage 1985 [S6]
Tiger count (2022 census) 104 [S3]
Tiger count (2024 census) 148 [S1]
Tiger species Panthera tigris tigris (Bengal Tiger) — Endangered (IUCN Red List) [S6]
IUCN WH Outlook status "Significant Concern" (2025 assessment) [S6]
Governing Act Wildlife Protection Act, 1972; amended 2006 for tiger reserves
Implementing body NTCA (under MoEF&CC)
Range where deaths occurred Bagori Range (deaths 1 & 3); Gamiri Range / Biswanath WL Division (death 2)
Elevated Corridor project Kaliabor–Numaligarh, NH-715; ~86 km total project; ~34.5 km elevated section
Corridor cost ₹6,950 crore [S4][S5]
NBWL approval conditions 34 conditions including speed limits & wildlife crossings [S7]
Project approving body National Board for Wildlife (NBWL)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Environmental / Biodiversity

Administrative / Governance

Legal / Constitutional

Scientific / Technological

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Kaziranga National Park was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1985. [S6]
  2. Kaziranga was notified as a Tiger Reserve in 2006 under the NTCA framework. [S3]
  3. The 2022 All India Tiger Estimation placed Kaziranga's tiger count at 104; the 2024 census revised it to 148. [S1][S3]
  4. Kaziranga has the highest ecological density of Royal Bengal tigers (Panthera tigris tigris) in the world. [S6]
  5. The Bengal Tiger is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List. [S6]
  6. Three tiger deaths in Kaziranga (January 2026) occurred in the Bagori Range (deaths 1 & 3) and Gamiri Range / Biswanath Wildlife Division (death 2). [S1]
  7. NTCA SOP mandates committee-based disposal of tiger carcasses; NTCA operates under MoEF&CC. [S1][S3]
  8. The Kaziranga Elevated Corridor (Kaliabor–Numaligarh) is built over NH-715; project cost ₹6,950 crore. [S4][S5]
  9. The elevated section of the corridor is ~34.5 km; total project stretch is ~86 km. [S4]
  10. The National Board for Wildlife (NBWL) approved the corridor with 34 conditions. [S7]
  11. NBWL is chaired by the Prime Minister of India.
  12. Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 was amended in 2006 to insert provisions for Tiger Reserves (Section 38V) and establish NTCA.
  13. M-STrIPES is the monitoring tool used by NTCA for tiger estimation using camera traps.
  14. Kaziranga is located in Golaghat and Nagaon districts of Assam.
  15. India's total tiger count as per the 2022 All India Tiger Estimation: 3,167 (released by PM Modi at International Tiger Day). [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper(s): Primarily GS-III (Environment & Biodiversity; Conservation); secondary angle in GS-II (Government policies, governance) and GS-I (Geography of India).

Syllabus headings: - GS-III: Conservation, environmental pollution, degradation; environmental impact assessment. - GS-III: Infrastructure — effects on environment (roads through protected areas). - GS-II: Government policies & interventions for development; statutory bodies (NTCA, NBWL).

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Rising tiger populations in India's flagship reserves are a conservation success story, yet they are creating new challenges. Critically examine the problem of carrying capacity and intraspecific conflict in Tiger Reserves with reference to Kaziranga." 2. "Infrastructure development through ecologically sensitive zones often pits economic imperatives against biodiversity conservation. Analyse the Kaziranga Elevated Corridor Project in this context, with reference to existing legal safeguards." 3. "Discuss the institutional mechanisms available under India's wildlife protection framework to address tiger mortality in Tiger Reserves. How effective is the NTCA in fulfilling its mandate?"


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Project Tiger & NTCA Parent scheme and statutory body governing all tiger reserves; directly invoked in this event
Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 (and 2006 Amendment) Legal backbone for Tiger Reserve declaration, NTCA powers, and carcass SOP
All India Tiger Estimation (M-STrIPES methodology) Understanding how the 104→148 jump was measured; Prelims favourite
National Board for Wildlife (NBWL) Approved the corridor; composition, powers, and role in forest diversions
Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980 Required for any diversion of forest land inside/around Tiger Reserves
UNESCO World Heritage Sites in India Kaziranga is one; IUCN monitoring, "Danger List" criteria — Prelims & Mains
Greater One-Horned Rhinoceros Conservation Kaziranga's primary OUV; IUCN Vulnerable; poaching and flood threats
Biological Corridors & Landscape Connectivity Core concept behind the elevated corridor; India's corridor policy under NBAP

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong census figure: Many aspirants conflate the 2022 figure (104) with the 2024 figure (148). The 2022 All India Tiger Estimation (national count: 3,167) predates the 2024 Kaziranga-specific census. [S3][S1]
  2. Corridor length confusion: The article mentions an "86-km" corridor; PIB confirms the elevated section is ~34.5 km within an ~86 km total project stretch on NH-715. Do not state the entire 86 km is elevated. [S4]
  3. NTCA vs NBWL: NTCA (under MoEF&CC) manages tiger reserves and SOP compliance; NBWL approves projects in/near protected areas and is chaired by the PM — not the Environment Minister. These are frequently swapped. [S3][S7]
  4. Infighting ≠ prey scarcity: Wildlife officials explicitly stated prey is not the issue at Kaziranga — the deaths are attributed to territorial pressure from overcrowding, not food shortage. A common error is to link infighting to prey depletion. [S1]
  5. "First death = infighting confirmed": Only the third death had a post-mortem-confirmed infighting cause; the second death was described as "natural or due to infighting" (inconclusive). Avoid overgeneralising. [S1]

11. Sources


Note compiled for UPSC 2025–26 cycle. Verify NTCA's 2024 census notification for the official gazette reference before the exam.