Why India Created Its 58th Tiger Reserve – Madhav National Park
16-03-2025
07:35 AM

What’s in Today’s Article?
- Tiger Reserve Latest News
- Rationale Behind Setting Up Tiger Reserves
- Key Aspects of Establishing a Tiger Reserve
- Significance of Madhav National Park
- Tiger Reserve FAQ’s

Tiger Reserve Latest News
- Recently, Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav announced that Madhav National Park in Madhya Pradesh has been designated as India’s 58th tiger reserve.
- With this, Madhya Pradesh now has nine tiger reserves, the highest among all states. In comparison, Maharashtra has six, while Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, and Karnataka have five each.
Rationale Behind Setting Up Tiger Reserves
- Decline in Tiger Population
- Tigers were once abundant in India, with an estimated 40,000 tigers in the early 20th century. However, due to hunting, poaching, deforestation, and colonial timber exploitation, their numbers declined sharply.
- By the 1960s, the population dropped to between 2,000 and 4,000, further worsened by gun licenses, increased forest access, and the fur trade.
- Conservation Efforts Begin
- Recognizing the crisis, naturalists raised alarms, leading to the Indian Board for Wild Life (IBWL) recommending a ban on wild cat skin exports in 1969.
- The same year, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) classified the tiger as an endangered species in its Red Data Book and called for a ban on tiger killings.
- Launch of Project Tiger (1973)
- With tiger numbers plummeting to 1,863, the then PM Indira Gandhi set up an 11-member Task Force to devise a conservation strategy.
- In August 1972, the Task Force proposed bringing key tiger habitats under Project Tiger, which was officially launched on April 1, 1973, at Corbett Tiger Reserve.
- First Nine Tiger Reserves
- Initially, nine tiger reserves were established across different ecosystems:
- Corbett (Uttarakhand); Palamau (Jharkhand); Simlipal (Odisha)
- Sundarbans (West Bengal); Manas (Assam); Ranthambore (Rajasthan)
- Kanha (Madhya Pradesh); Melghat (Maharashtra); Bandipur (Karnataka)
- These reserves formed the foundation of India’s tiger conservation movement, ensuring habitat protection and population recovery.
- Initially, nine tiger reserves were established across different ecosystems:
Key Aspects of Establishing a Tiger Reserve
- Scientific Management Framework
- Project Tiger, later replaced by the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) in 2006, introduced a structured approach to managing protected areas.
- Every tiger reserve must follow a site-specific management plan, ensuring scientific conservation practices.
- Core and Buffer Zones
- Tiger reserves are divided into:
- Core Zone – Strictly protected habitat for tigers and wildlife.
- Buffer Zone – Surrounding area with regulated human activities to support conservation efforts.
- Tiger reserves are divided into:
- Tiger Conservation Plans (TCPs)
- The NTCA guidelines ensure:
- Protection and habitat management for a viable population of tigers, prey, and co-predators.
- Ecologically compatible land use to connect tiger reserves and other protected areas.
- Corridor creation to maintain genetic diversity by linking source populations (where tiger numbers grow) to sink habitats (where numbers decline).
- The NTCA guidelines ensure:
- Process of Declaring a Tiger Reserve
- State Government submits a proposal to the Centre.
- NTCA evaluates and recommends the proposal.
- State Government officially notifies the area as a tiger reserve.
- This structured process ensures the long-term conservation and sustainability of tiger populations in India.
- Funding Mechanism for Tiger Reserves
- Centre-State Cost Sharing
- General States: 60% of the funding is provided by the Central Government, while the remaining 40% is borne by the State Government.
- Northeastern & Himalayan States: The Centre covers 90% of the cost, with States contributing 10%.
- Centre-State Cost Sharing
Significance of Madhav National Park
- Notified as a National Park in 1956 under the MP National Parks Act, 1955 with an initial area of 165.32 sq km.
- Now expanded to 355 sq km core area with a buffer zone of 4-6 sq km.
- Until 2023, there were no tigers; a male and two females were relocated, leading to a population increase to seven.
Ecological & Strategic Importance
- Functions as a key wildlife corridor linking the Ranthambore Tiger Reserve (Rajasthan) and Kuno National Park.
- Kuno hosts a captive cheetah population, raising concerns about predator competition for prey (deer population).
- Madhya Pradesh leads India in tiger conservation with 785 tigers, yet the Kuno-Madhav division has historically been neglected.
- Consolidated wildlife management is now focusing on both tigers and cheetahs in the region.
Future Conservation Plans & Challenges
- Proposal to relocate Asiatic lions from Gir (Gujarat) to Kuno, approved by the Supreme Court.
- The government, in March 2023, raised concerns about lion-cheetah competition, delaying the relocation.
- If lions are introduced, it could bring more national and international conservation funding.
Tiger Reserve FAQs
Q1. Why was Madhav National Park declared a tiger reserve?
Ans. To strengthen conservation, protect habitats, and establish vital wildlife corridors in Madhya Pradesh.
Q2. What is the significance of Madhav National Park?
Ans. It links Ranthambore and Kuno reserves, ensuring biodiversity and predator-prey balance.
Q3. How are tiger reserves funded in India?
Ans. The Centre funds 60%, states cover 40%; for Himalayan/Northeastern states, the Centre provides 90%.
Q4. What is the role of Project Tiger in conservation?
Ans. Launched in 1973, it protects tigers, ensures habitat conservation, and monitors populations.
Q5. What are the future plans for Kuno and Madhav reserves?
Ans. Plans include introducing Asiatic lions, managing cheetahs, and securing additional conservation funding.