Scientists find 75-90 % decline in Leopard population in India
As per a study conducted by scientists from the Centre for Wildlife Studies (CWS India) and the Wildlife Institute of India, leopard population has declined 75-90 per cent in India. The study argues that the carnivore demands similar conservation ...

The study was conducted by scientists from the Centre for Wildlife Studies (CWS India) and the Wildlife Institute of India.
The scientists have used genetic data from leopards sampled across the Indian subcontinent to investigate population structure and patterns of demographic decline, a CWS India press release said.
They investigated the demographic history of each identified subpopulations and compared genetic decline analyses with countrywide local extinction probabilities.
The study was conducted by Supriya Bhatt, Suvankar Biswas, Dr Bivash Pandav, Dr Samrat Mondol (all from Wildlife Institute of India) and Dr Krithi K Karanth (Centre for Wildlife Studies).
The study revealed population structure and recent decline in leopards.
"Coalescent simulations with microsatellite loci revealed, across India, a possibly human-induced 7590 per cent population decline between approximately 120200 years ago," it said.
The population-specific estimates of genetic decline are in concordance with ecological estimates of local extinction probabilities in these subpopulations, it was stated.
The study suggested that leopards demand similar conservation attention like tigers in India.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.