Gangtok: Feral dogs have become a menace in Sikkim, attacking
wildlife, including endangered species like the red panda, and humans
living on the fringes of the state's seven wildlife sanctuaries and the
Khangchendzonga National Park.
Forest officials and NGOs said
there has been a massive increase in the population of feral dogs, which
in the long run could pose a serious challenge to wildlife protection
in the region.
According to them, there have been a number of
instances of the wild dogs' attacks on other animals like red panda,
Tibetan gazelle, musk deer and yak, among others, in the last two-three
years. In the past fortnight, two army jawans were seriously injured
after being attacked by feral dogs.
C. S. Rao, additional chief
conservator of forest, said feral dogs have been a problem for the past
few years, and the forest department is trying to tackle the menace
under its Sikkim Anti-Rabies and Animal Health (SARAH) programme, which
is a statewide anti-rabies and animal birth control project started in
2005.
"With the help of the SARAH team, we are sterilizing feral dogs in
the field and releasing them in the forests. Under the Centre's
Integrated Wildlife Habitat Development programme, we have also taken
sterilizing activities along the fringes of the wildlife sanctuaries and
Khangchendzonga Nationa Park," he said, adding that plans are also
afoot to provide additional funds to SARAH for the sterilization of more
dogs.
Rao said the main reason for the rise in the number of
feral dogs and their increasing incursion into human habitation is the
haphazard dumping of garbage in the areas on the fringes of forests. "
Garbage
is not being managed properly. These animals frequently visit these
areas because they are getting food very easily... We are trying to
generate awareness, asking people to avoid dumping garbage in the open.
We can control this problem up to certain level if we can do this," he
said.
Priyadarshini Shrestha, the team leader of World Worldlife
Fund-India, Sikkim and Darjeeling region, agreed that the open garbage
pits dotting the forest fringes were a major factor for the increase in
the population of feral dogs not just in Sikkim but the entire eastern
Himalayas. "Improper dumping of waste not only attracts wild animals but
also sustain their population," she said.
During the course of
her organisation's study on the distribution and population of snow
leopard and red panda in Sikkim, it was found that the main cause for
the proliferation of these dogs was improper garbage disposal, not only
from human settlements, but also from the numerous road construction
camps, Army and paramilitary camps located in the area. "A concerted and
consistent effort of the forest department, NGOs and the Army is needed
to tackle the menace," said Shrestha.
The Telegraph
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