Title:- The Royal Bengal Tiger of The Sundarbans: Ecology, Conservation, and the Future of Panthera tigris tigris
Authors:- Matiur Rahaman, Dr. Shankar Nath Sen
Volume, Issue & Year :- Volume 1, Issue 4, March – April 2026
Date:- 26/04/2026
Page No:- 150 – 163
DOI:- https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19786939
Abstract:- One of the most biologically distinctive and seriously endangered tiger populations on the planet is the Royal Bengal tiger (Panthera tigris tigris) of the Sundarbans. These tigers have developed amazing adaptations to a tidal, saline, and flood-prone environment that is unmatched anywhere else in the tiger’s global range. They live in the largest mangrove forest in the world, a 10,277 km² deltaic ecosystem shared by Bangladesh and India. The ecology, habits, population status, dangers, and conservation tactics of the Sundarbans tiger are summarised in this publication. The total tiger population of both countries is anticipated to be over 200 as of 2024–2025, with 125 mature tigers in Bangladesh (increasing 17.92% since 2015) and an estimated 100 tigers in India’s Sundarbans ……..
Keywords:- Royal Bengal tigers, Sundarbans, Panthera tigris tigris, Mangrove ecology, Conservation, Conflict between humans and wildlife, and Camera traps.
* Download Full Article:- https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19786939
