Report on Tiger Reintroduction and Lessons from Satkosia
Overview
The NTCA and the WII released a joint publication titled “Reintroduction & Population Recovery of Tigers in India: Field Experiences & Key Learnings” on 28 June 2026. The report analyses twelve tiger reserves over the last two decades and draws attention to the stark contrast between successes such as Simlipal and failures like Satkosia.
Key Developments
- Current tiger count across the twelve studied reserves is 288, a 658 % increase from the 38 tigers recorded at the start of reintroduction programmes.
- First reintroduction (2008) moved two females and one male from Ranthambore to Sariska. The latest (2024) transferred two females from Tadoba‑Andhari to Simlipal.
- Simlipal’s population doubled from 15 to 32 within two years, while Sariska took 18 years to reach 56 tigers.
- Panna Tiger Reserve, after receiving three founders in 2009, now hosts 88 tigers – the highest among the studied sites.
- Satkosia Tiger Reserve, despite a 2018 reintroduction of a male and a female, recorded zero tigers in 2026.
Important Facts
Key statistics drawn from the report:
- Area of Satkosia: 963.87 sq km
- Area of Simlipal: 2,750 sq km
- Area of Panna: 1,598 sq km
- Number of reintroduced tigers (2008‑2024): 23 across the twelve reserves
Exam Relevance
The report touches on several concepts that are part of the UPSC syllabus:
- Tiger Reintroduction as a policy tool and its varied outcomes.
- Satkosia Tiger Reserve as a case study of implementation gaps.
- Prey Depletion and its impact on tiger survival.
- Ecological Connectivity as a prerequisite for successful reintroduction.
- Human‑tiger conflict, livestock depredation and community perception – topics linked to rural development and environmental governance.
Way Forward
Based on the findings, the report recommends a multi‑pronged approach:
- Conduct thorough baseline surveys of prey density and habitat quality before any translocation.
- Strengthen anti‑poaching patrols and ensure rapid response mechanisms to curb illegal killings.
- Engage local communities through compensation schemes, livelihood alternatives and awareness programmes to build social acceptance.
- Develop and maintain wildlife corridors that enhance ecological connectivity between core tiger habitats.
- Implement adaptive management with continuous monitoring, allowing policy tweaks based on real‑time data.
In sum, the NTCA‑WII assessment underscores that tiger restoration is not a one‑off event but a long‑term, science‑driven process that must address ecological, social and administrative dimensions simultaneously.