Pench Tiger Reserve
Pench Tiger Reserve is a tiger reserve in India straddling across Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra. On the Madhya Pradesh side, it encompasses a core area of, with a buffer of, making for a total protected area of. On the Maharashtra side, the Pench Tiger Reserve has a core habitat area of along with a buffer zone of making total protected area of. Pench Tiger Reserve comprises Pench National Park, Mowgli Pench Sanctuary and a buffer area, which span more than.
History
Pench Sanctuary was created in September 1977, with an initial area of 449.39 km2. Pench National Park, recently renamed as Indira Priyadarshini Pench National Park, was created in 1983, carved out of the Sanctuary. The Tiger Reserve, 19th in the series, was formed under the Project Tiger scheme in November 1992.The fictional works of Rudyard Kipling, The Jungle Book and The Second Jungle Book, are set in the region. Kipling himself never visited the area, instead basing his descriptions on other locations in India.
Bor Wildlife Sanctuary and some adjacent protected areas will be merged with Pench Tiger Reserve, as a 'Satellite core area', to more than double the area of that tiger reserve.
Geography
Pench Tiger Reserve located in Seoni district and Chhindwara district of Madhya Pradesh and Nagpur district of Maharashtra. It gets its name from the Pench River that flows north to south through the reserve. The Pench River bisects the original Pench core reserve into two nearly equal parts; the of the Western Block which falls in the Gumtara Range of the Chhindwara district forest division and the of the Eastern Block in the Karmajhiri Range of the Seoni district forest division. The Reserve lies in the southern lower reaches of the Satpura Range of hills.Pench Tiger Reserve derives its name from its life line, the Pench River. Inside the park, the river flows from north to south before joining the Kanhan River. The Meghdoot dam built across Pench River at Totaladoh has created a large water body of out of which falls in Madhya Pradesh and the rest in the adjoining state of Maharashtra. The Pench River emerges from Mahadeo Hills of Satpura Range and the various nallas and streams which drain into it.
Climate
The Central Indian Highlands have a tropical monsoonal climate, with a distinct monsoon, winter, and summer.The mean annual rainfall is around 1,400 mm, with the south-west monsoon accounting for most of the rainfall in the region. For the dry season, the mean rainfall is 59.5 mm, and the temperature varies from a minimum of 0 °C in winter to 45 °C in summer.
Flora
Pench Tiger Reserve belongs to the Indo-Malayan phytogeographical region and is categorized as a tropical moist deciduous habitat. Floristically, Pench Tiger Reserve can be classified, according to Champion and Seth as Tropical Moist Deciduous Forests and Tropical Dry Deciduous Forests.Teak is a ubiquitous species in the region, with a presence ranging from a sporadic distribution in most parts of the study area to localized teak-dominated patches. Teak, and associated species such as Madhuca indica, Diospyros melanoxylon, Terminalia tomentosa, Buchanania lanzan, Lagerstroemia parviflora, Ougeinia dalbergoides, Miliusa velutina and Lannea coromandalica, occur on flat terrain. The undulating terrain and hill slopes have patches of Mixed Forest dominated by Boswellia serrata and Anogeissus latifolia. Species like Sterculia urens and Gardenia latifolia are found scattered on rocky slopes. Bamboo forests occur in the hill slopes and along streams. Some of the open patches of the Park are covered with tall grasses interspersed with Butea monosperma and Zizyphus mauritiana. Evergreen tree species like Terminalia arjuna, Syzygium cumini and Ixora parviflora are found in riparian vegetation along nullahs and river banks. Cleistanthus collinus dominant patches are also found in some parts of the Tiger Reserve.
The tracts that previously formed pastures of villages now constitute open grassy meadows much favoured by the gregarious herbivores. With the approach of summer, the extent of open areas of the Reserve gradually increases with the recession of reservoir's waters.
Fauna
, the Reserve falls in Oriental region. The carnivore fauna is represented by the Bengal tiger, Indian leopard, dhole, jungle cat, and small Indian civet. Wolves occur on the fringes and outside the Reserve limits. Striped hyena, sloth bear, golden jackal, and Asian palm civet make up the rest of the carnivore fauna of the Reserve.Chital, sambar, gaur, nilgai, wild pig, Indian muntjac and chowsingha, are the wild ungulate species found in the study area. Chital, sambar, nilgai and wild pigs are found all over the Tiger Reserve. With the distribution of water governing their movement patterns to a great extent, gaur migrate down from the hills during the dry season and occupy the forests along the Pench River and other sources of water, and migrate back to the hill forests during the
monsoon. Nilgai are found mostly in a few open areas, along forest roads, scrub jungles and fringe areas of the Reserve. Chowsingha are more localized to the greatly undulating areas of the Reserve. Barking deer are seen infrequently in moist riverine stretches. Chinkara are infrequently seen on the open areas bordering and outside the Buffer Zone of the Reserve.
The common northern plains gray langur and rhesus macaque represent the primate fauna of the area. The Indian porcupine, two species of mongoose viz. Indian grey mongoose and ruddy mongoose, and Indian hare also occur in this Tiger Reserve.
Famous tigers
One of the tigresses in the reserve, Badi Mada or Barimada, became well known for giving birth to 29 cubs over 17 years.Collarwali, a daughter of Badi Mada, starred with her mother in the BBC Wildlife Special Tiger: Spy in the Jungle, which popularised the reserve. She became one of India's best known tigers, giving birth to 26 cubs in 7 litters and 29 cubs in 8 litters by her death in January 2022 at the age of 16. Born in 2005 and initially dubbed T-15, she acquired the name Collarwali after being the first tigress in the park fitted with a radio collar, in 2008. She was unusually large for a female and because she was comparatively friendly, was the most frequently seen tiger in the park. In 2010 she gave birth to an unusually large litter, 5 cubs. Of Collarwali's cubs, records indicate 14 of the 18 born by 2013 and 17 of the 22 from her first 6 litters survived to adulthood. They have dispersed to other parts of Pench and some may have crossed over to other tiger reserves such as Kanha National Park. For example, in December 2010, male T-39, born in her second litter in October 2008, travelled more than 50 km to near the boundary of the reserve. She died in January 2022 and was cremated by a local tribal leader.
The Baghin nala female or Baghinnalawali female, a littermate of Collarwali, was so-named because she established a territory close to a nullah. Although shy, she was popular with tourists visiting Pench. However, on 28 and 29 March 2016, she and two 8-month-old cubs were found dead inside the core area of the tiger reserve, not far from a patrolling camp. Post-mortem examination confirmed poisoning, and three men were arrested in early April, suspected of poisoning a deer that the tigers had eaten.
Research in Pench
Long-term research in Pench was initiated by the study on the interactions between wild animal and their habitat in the Pench Sanctuary by Shukla. This was followed by a tiger-prey estimation study by Karanth and Nichols. Since 1995 the Wildlife Institute of India has initiated a series of studies beginning with a long-term radio telemetry study on the gaur , followed by the creation of a spatial mapping database for the Tiger Reserve.Short-term Master's studies at the Wildlife Institute of India increased the knowledge on avifauna, wild herbivores tiger food habits and the diversity and distribution of the avifauna in Pench Tiger Reserve.
Threats
Wildlife in Pench Tiger Reserve is threatened by poaching gangs working in and around Pench Tiger Reserve. In 2016, a tigress and her cubs were killed by poisoning. Another notorious series of incidents occurred in 2017.Pench Tiger Reserve is under growing pressure from poaching, encroachment, grazing and forest degradation, which together threaten tiger habitat and prey populations. Recent research from PTR Maharashtra recorded livestock grazing across 15.33% of the reserve area, showing heavy human use disturb grasslands and forest edges.
Forest destruction increases due to illegal encroachment and converting woodland into farms. In the Satpuda–Pench corridor about 180 sq km forest loss linked to mining and encroachments, reducing safe movement routes for wildlife.