試す 金 - 無料
Highway Killer
Down To Earth
|July 1, 2017
Leopards in the Rajaji National Park have killed over a dozen people in the past year. Why is the big cat choosing humans over its natural prey?
ON MAY 3, forest officers at the Motichur range of the Rajaji National Park found a bundle of beedis and a bag with some religious books next to the National Highway 58, which cuts through the protected area. After investigation they found that the items belonged to a traveller who was killed by a leopard. Four days later, the department captured the man-eater leopard—the fourth in just five months. Ten days later, another leopard killed section officer of the forest range, Anand Singh.
“We have identified the animal from our camera trap footage. It displays behaviour typical of a man-eater. It is old, appears diseased with a swollen throat, and is mostly spotted in the peripheral regions of the range,” says Sanatan, director of the reserve, which is just 6 km from Haridwar.
Over the past one year, leopards have killed more than a dozen people in the Motichur range. Forest officers say the figure is 11, while local residents claim it is 14. The only consensus is that leopards in the range are hunting for human flesh since 2014.
Most of the attacks have been registered in the narrow, traffic-prone stretches of the highway, says Vikas Rawat, range officer. “The highway is being widened into a four lane. Travellers tend to step out of their cars when they get stuck in the narrow stretches on the highway without realising that it is a leopard-prone zone,” says Rawat.
The reserve authorities say they are doing their bit. “The department has put up warning signboards in leopard-prone areas next to the national highway,” says Sanatan. But
このストーリーは、Down To Earth の July 1, 2017 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Down To Earth からのその他のストーリー
Down To Earth
CONSERVED BY COMMUNITY
How a desire to make snow leopard tourism sustainable helped a small Ladakhi settlement became the region's first Community Conserved Area
4 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
An 'open' and 'shut' case of Al's risky trajectory
Elon Musk's lawsuit against Sam Altman, OpenAl, Microsoft is crucially about open-source versus closed technology for corporate profit
4 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
Burden of transition
Clean energy transition is once again shifting environmental, human costs to the Global South, finds a UN university investigation
4 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
One step closer
India attains criticality in fast breeder reactor technology, reaching the second stage of the country's three- stage nuclear programme towards energy security
4 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
ZESTY SEEDS
Coriander seeds are a traditional antidote to summer heat
3 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
Sahyadri gets a bird village
Residents of Maharashtra's Pisavare village have embarked on a mission to protect birds in their vicinity through simple practices such as documenting species and building nests
2 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
CONFLICT IN THE BACKYARD
Across India, farmers are abandoning their fields as conflict with wild and stray animals intensifies. Conservation policy must move beyond protection alone to restore a workable coexistence between people and animals.
18 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
Capital punishment
Adequate compensation and proper rehabilitation remain a mirage for many displaced by the construction of Chhattisgarh's new capital, Nava Raipur, even two decades after the project began
3 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
Migrant workers are assets
MIGRATION HAS turned into a potent tool of political warfare across the world. For over a decade, domestic electoral politics across regions, from Europe and North America to Asia and Africa, have fuelled anti-immigration sentiments. This is also increasingly fuelling anti-immigrant vigilantism, as seen widely across Europe in 2015-16, coinciding with the refugee crisis.
2 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
Petri dish to plate
Synthetic meat production has seen a rise globally, even as environmental benefits of growing foods in laboratory remain debatable
10 mins
May 16, 2026
Translate
Change font size
