Madhya Pradesh, which had 785 tigers as per a 2022 census, the highest in the country, has lost nine tigers since April 2, when a tiger was found dead in the forested area of Burhanpur.
The carcass of a cub, aged between one and one-and-a-half years, was found on Thursday evening in the Sargi area of the KTR’s core area, which spans Mandla and Balaghat districts, said the park’s Deputy Director Amita B.
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Elsewhere, a full-grown tiger was found dead in the north forest division of Balaghat district, officials said.
”The post-mortem of the cub was conducted on Friday, and we are awaiting its report (to know the exact cause of death),” said KTR deputy director Amita.
Prima facie, it appears the cub may not have been fed by its mother, leading to its death by starvation, she said, adding that another cub of the same tigress had died three days ago.
”The tigress delivered four cubs, of which two have died. We are closely monitoring the tigress and the remaining two cubs,” said the official.
According to the data shared by the National Tiger Conservation Authority, Madhya Pradesh, home to nine reserves, had recorded 21 deaths as of April 21 this year.
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The first death of 2026 was reported on January 7 in the Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve.
Wildlife activist Ajay Dubey expressed concern over the rising tiger deaths in the state.
”Madhya Pradesh ranks first in tiger deaths, including unnatural deaths, which is worrying,” he said.
Lack of monitoring and patrolling contributes to such incidents, Dubey said, demanding accountability from forest officials.
He cited a recent case in Panna Tiger Reserve where a decomposed carcass was found nearly 20 days after the animal’s death.

