Nepal: Conservationists are worried about the possible migration of one-horned rhinos to Indian territory from Bardiya National Park (BNP), the largest national park in lowland Tarai covering an area of 968 square kilometres. It is suspected that around 20 rhinos entered the bordering Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary of India.
According to the authorities
concerned, the rhinos of Bardiya National Park migrated across the border to
India due to problems with drinking water, mainly in the Geruwa areas. Bijaya
Raj Subedi, chief of the Division Forest Office in Bardiya, said that 20 to 22
rhinos were believed to have been in Indian territory recently. “The rhinos
went towards India due to shortage of water on the Nepal side,” said Subedi.
“Since the wildlife, including rhinos, do not stay in the same place forever,
the migrated rhinos may return to Nepal again.”
The Geruwa area is the main
habitat of rhinos, tigers, elephants and spotted deer, among other animals. The
number of wildlife has decreased considerably in the area over the past few
years due to shortage of water sources. A sharp decline in the water flow in
Geruwa river, an offshoot of the Karnali River a few kilometres downstream from
Chisapani, has forced wildlife in the western part of the national park to
migrate to other places for drinking water mainly in the dry season.
The one-horned rhino, which
is native to Nepal and India, is an endangered animal species. According to the
national rhino census held in 2021, Nepal is home to 752 one-horned rhinos. The
rhinos are found in four protected areas in the country—Chitwan National Park,
Bardiya National Park, Shuklaphanta National Park and Parsa National Park.
According to the census, Chitwan National Park alone hosts 694 rhinos while
Bardiya National Park has 38, Shuklaphanta National Park has 17 and Parsa
National Park has three.
Of the total 38 rhinos in
Bardiya, three have died due to natural causes since the census.
There is a 24-km long Khata
bio-corridor along the shared border of Bardiya National Park in Nepal and
Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary in India. Various wildlife including rhinos,
tigers and elephants move across the border quite frequently.
According to
conservationists, two rhinos from Bardiya National Park had reached
Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary in 2010. The Indian authorities had constructed
a muddy pond and managed drinking water to retain the migrated pachyderms.
“The rhinos migrate to
Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary as water is gradually drying up in the Geruwa
river,” said Ajit Tumbahamphe, Bardiya chief of the National Trust for Nature
Conservation. “Rhinos may be extinct from Bardiya if the authorities do not
take prompt action to manage habitat for them.”
It is quite difficult for the
national park officials to monitor the possibly migrated rhinos as they do not
have radio collars. As it sensed the cross border migration of the rhinos, the
Bardiya National Park started monitoring rhinos in the area last week. When
asked about the rhinos that entered the Indian area, the park officials refused
to comment over the issue.
Conservationists urged the
national park and other authorities concerned to manage habitat for rhinos in
Bardiya National Park and buffer zone forests. “The rhinos migrate to India due
to lack of water sources and proper habitats in Nepal,” said Ram Bahadur Shahi,
a local conservationist and nature guide. “Noise pollution along the highway
area also displaces wildlife.”
Thirteen rhinos—five males
and eight females—had been brought to the Bardiya from Chitwan in 1986. As many
as 70 more rhinos were shifted to Bardiya later at different times. The
poaching of one-horned rhinos was unchecked during the decade-long armed
insurgency (1996-2006). As many as 36 rhinos were killed during the insurgency
while 24 others died due to natural causes. However, there has been zero
poaching of rhinos in the Bardiya National Park and its surrounding areas over
the past 15 years.
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