
India and Bangladesh to work for the Sunderbans tigers
From http://blogs.wsj.com/indiarealtime/2011/09/12/india-bangladesh-join-hands-to-save-sunderbans/
The Teesta water-sharing agreement may have turned to dust, but there were a few positive breakthroughs that came out of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's visit to
Wildlife experts have said that efforts to protect the Sunderbans' ecosystems have stalled partly because of the geographical divide. "Even though Sunderbans is divided by two countries, it is a single ecosystem," said S.B Mondal, chief wildlife warden at the Sunderbans' biosphere reserve. He hopes that the agreement to jointly manage the forest will change that.
Mr. Singh and Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina signed a five-year Memorandum of Understanding on the Sunderbans and announced that the two countries will jointly patrol its waterways on their respective sides "to prevent poaching or smuggling of derivatives from wildlife and bilateral initiatives to ensure survival and conservation of the Royal Bengal Tiger." This is the first major agreement between the two countries on this issue.
The agreement is a significant development that could also pave the way to repopulate the Sunderbans' dwindling tiger population, which stands at around 70, according to the latest tiger census. So far, crimes like poaching have been hard to prosecute in the area because of the poor communication between the two countries.
Rajesh Gopal, director of the National Tiger Conservation Authority, said this agreement is long due. Whether this will help the tiger population, however, depends on the extent to which
But he also pointed out that this is not enough:
Besides its endangered tiger population, the Sunderbans' ecosystem faces several other threats including rising sea levels, due to global warming, and the progressive erosion of the over 100 islands located there. Villagers chopping wood from the Sunderbans for their daily livelihood is also an issue.








