Watch: After Being Tracked For 3,000 Km, Tiger’s Radio Collar Removed

A delicate remote control operation to remove a tracking collar from a tiger on a 13-month trek through the country has been carried out to avoid the device choking the animal.

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The tiger, named Walker for the roughly 3,000 kilometres of terrain it covered, has been tracked by wildlife experts through forests, farms, highways and villages.

It was fitted as a three-year-old with a radio collar and followed by GPS since February last year.

A tortuous trek in search of a mate and prey took the tiger on a winding route from one animal sanctuary in Maharashtra to another about 1,300 kilometres away, according to the Wildlife Institute of India (WII).

But the collar’s battery drained and the tiger began to outgrow the device, presenting a choking hazard that prompted conservationists to remove it last week using a “remote drop-off option”.

I shared story of #tiger C1 which walked 3017 Kms in 13 months in search of mate. He was tracked through VHF Radio Telemetry, through a collar. Shared procedure yesterday. After drain of battery this is how radio collar is removed by remote control. Technology in #conservation. pic.twitter.com/eBhyuEHg9f

— Parveen Kaswan, IFS (@ParveenKaswan) April 2, 2020
“The animal has achieved all the skills to survive and avoid humans,” a report by WII said, and attempts would now be made to track the male tiger by camera.

A video of the operation, which has been widely viewed on social media, shows Walker laying on the ground before jumping up in surprise as the collar suddenly pops off.
The tiger was one of three cubs born in the Tipeshwar wildlife sanctuary in Maharashtra in 2016.

It has since settled in Dnyanganga sanctuary in the same state, about 1,300 kilometres away.

The animal has roamed virtually unseen by humans during its 13 months on the move — a feat WII experts said showed how the tigers cleverly “traverse through human-dominated landscapes without any conflict”.

India is estimated to be home to about 70 percent of the world’s tigers, which are considered an endangered species.

The government said in July last year that since 2015 the tiger population had increased 30 percent to almost 3,000.

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