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Foresters have collected the information from camera traps and based on actual sightings of cubs in the reserve, which is a densely populated haven for big cats in the state, the official said.
”The forest staff after analyzing the data has found over 41 tiger cubs, from newborns to one-year-olds, at BTR,” principal chief conservator of forest (wildlife) Alok Kumar said.
As per the data, four eight to 10-month-old cubs were spotted in the Kallavah beat, while 12 in the same age group were seen in Pator.
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Apart from these, Bhanpur has two newborns, five cubs aged 10 to 12 months old were seen in Maghdi beat and four in the age group of eight to 12 months old in Khitouli, the official said, adding that two cubs were spotted in a cave in Badkheda beat.
The BTR is also known as a nursery of tigers in the state and once they grow, adult big cats are shifted to places in and out of the state, where their density is low, Kumar said.
Bandhavgarh was declared a national park in 1968 and later as a tiger reserve in 1993. Spread across 716 sq km, the reserve is known for the highest density of tiger population.