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Gujarat | One county for cats of all stripes

A tiger wanders in from nearby Madhya Pradesh and settles down—offering a local sighting after 40 years. But the excitement is muted by caution as conservationists ponder the complexities

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BURNING BRIGHT: The tiger from Madhya Pradesh, spotted in Gujarat’s Ratanmahal Sanctuary

It’s the one state that famously has exclusive bragging rights on owning the biggest of the big cats within India, even figuratively. Now, as if with a nod of its feline head at recent political developments, the Bengal Tiger, too, has fallen to the charms of this western state. To be sure, it’s a homecoming. The tiger did once roam Gujarat’s forests, but was declared locally extinct four decades ago. So, when a solitary tiger travelled through the Vindhyachal ranges, a historic forest pathway linking Madhya Pradesh’s tiger-rich reserves to the Ratanmahal Wildlife Sanctuary in Dahod, eastern Gujarat, it was a reclaiming of lost territory. And ecology foreshadowed human affairs. February 2025 marked its first confirmed presence, and since then the male cat has marked his territory and made a few kills—the first step in applying for naturalised citizenship. The National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) has duly added Gujarat to the tiger census 2025-26. The exercise will be held next in June 2026.

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