Sikkim: Royal Bengal Tiger Caught on Camera for the First Time at Pangolakha Wildlife Sanctuary
Lachungpa also said that there had been oral narratives of tigers freely roaming in the forests of Sikkim until the late 1980s.
Gangtok, January 10: A Royal Bengal Tiger has been caught in a camera trap laid by forest officials in Sikkim. According to officials of the forest department, this is the first time that a tiger has been captured on camera in the state. "History has indeed been created with the first-ever camera footage of a Royal Bengal Tiger roaming in the forests of Pangolakha Wildlife Sanctuary in East Sikkim," the Divisional Forest Officer (DFO) of East Wildlife Division, Dechen Lachungpa, said.
The camera captured two images of the tiger on the night of December 6, 2018 - at 6.23 pm and at 7 pm, near Goru Jurey, at an altitude of 9,583 feet, the DFO said. "We got to know about the camera trap images only a couple of days ago," the forest official added. Tigress Chases Jeep Carrying Tourists in Maharashtra's Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve, Watch Breathtaking Video.
Lachungpa also said that there had been oral narratives of tigers freely roaming in the forests of Sikkim until the late 1980s. However, the first-ever picture of the animal could be a concrete base on which a detailed study on migration of tigers to the Himalayan state could be undertaken, the DFO added.