There has been a number of rumours circulating that India is to cease access to National Parks by tourists.
This has been met with horror among consevationists because well visited parks have the greater populations of wild tigers.
My question "Do they have more tourists because for now they have a higher population of tigers or is the tiger population higher because of tourists?"
As in Africa a poacher looks for the quiet un visited areas so the more tourists the more eyes to keep the poacher away!
But the higher level of tourism the greater the effect on the enviroment & the animals.
Also the banning or reducing tourism, would seriously have an effect on local economies & thus possibly lead to more poaching!!
As you know Tigers are very close to my heart, I canot remember my first Lion sighting but I vividly remember my first Tiger
I'm no expert, far from it but I think the days of the cheap tiger safari must end at least untill the population has risen to a healthy level.
I would hate that tiger tourism become the realm of the wealthy but I see no other way to releave the pressure.
I would add as a manual worker large fee increases would put Tiger Safaris beyond my means.
Again I'm no expert but since the control of park tourism was removed from the Forestry Department & given to the Department of Tourism to control, the Parks have sunk into a "Free for all" for guides & tourists!
The parks have always had this pressure due to the Indian culture with guides & drivers determed to offer their clients the best experience they can.
As usual I ramble on here is a report from the "Tiger World News" [URL=http://tigerworldnews.wordpress.com/2010/05/04/no-plan-to-stop-tiger-tourism-says-india/]Web link here TIGER WORLD NEWS[/URL]
No plan to stop tiger tourism says India
Posted on 05/04/2010 by tigress62
No plan to stop tiger tourism says India
Hannah Gardner, Foreign Correspondent
Last Updated: May 03. 2010 11:06PM UAE / May 3. 2010 7:06PM GMT
NEW DELHI: India’s environment minister yesterday denied reports that the government was planning to phase out tourism in the country’s world famous tiger reserves.
Hundreds of thousands of visitors from all over the world travel to India every year to catch a glimpse of a Bengal tiger, one of the world’s most endangered species, and a ban would have dealt a heavy blow to the country’s tourism industry.
Jairam Ramesh, India’s minister for the environment and forests, said: “Our policy is to develop a set of guidelines for eco-tourism where tourism takes place in a sustainable way, linked to the carrying capacity of the reserves. We are not at all interested in stopping tiger tourism.”
Last week, the Times of London reported that the National Tiger Conservation Authority was planning to phase out tourism in the core area of India’s tiger reserves because large numbers of visitors were destroying the cat’s habitat and driving away prey.
Six of India’s 37 tiger reserves are open to tourists and the core areas offer the best chance of sighting one of these elusive animals.
The report sent shockwaves though India’s high-end tourism industry and many experts spoke out against such a ban, saying that well-managed tourism is one of the best ways to ensure the big cat’s survival.
India’s tiger population has plummeted in recent years as a result of poaching and loss of habitat.
A census in February 2008 showed India’s tiger population had dropped to 1,411 from 3,642 in 2002. Some experts say there may be as few as 800 wild tigers left in India and that the species could be extinct in five years.
Mr Ramesh said that tourism at some reserves needed to be better regulated but that revenues generated from visitors meant that the local communities were invested in the animal’s long term survival.
“Tourism is the only way to generate revenue for the local community,” Mr Ramesh said. “We have no intention of stopping tourism.”