Pugmark
A pugmark is a footprint left by a wild animal. The distinctive pugmark of an individual species is useful for identification. "Pug" means foot in Hindi.
Image:Thylacine-footprint-nocaption.png|thumb|right|300px|An image of a thylacine pugmark
Pugmark tracking is a technique used by wildlife conservationists to identify the distribution of species. For some species, such as tigers, pugmark tracking is now considered to be an unreliable method of determining an area's total animal population, leading to the rise in the use of alternative techniques to count populations, such as photographic capture.
Field data collection
Indian forester Saroj Raj Choudhury developed the technique of the ‘pugmark census’ in 1966 to track tigers. It involves collecting pugmark tracings and plaster casts from the field and analyzing these to determine the number, track dimensions and spatial distribution of key species.Technique
In order to obtain good pug impressions, PIPs are laid along roads, animal tracks and footpaths. Field data for each pugmark are then collected in specially devised census forms. The plaster casts and tracings along with field information are together analysed with map of the area to remove repetitions and overlaps in pug-evidences collected for the same tiger.Image:Bear-footprint.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Pugmark of a bearImage:Polarbeartrack-1.jpg|thumb|right|250px|A polar bear pugmark
The final result claimed to indicate the total numbers of male, female and cub of tiger and leopard, their pugmark dimensions with stride where available, the names of locations where the pugmarks of each tiger have been traced to show the gross movement areas interrelationship among different tigers by linking each male to female and the latter to cubs tracked in the movement area, and finally spatial distribution map.
The technique was used for over three decades in India, until the 1990s when it was found to be an inaccurate way to measuring tiger populations.