– Number of birds dropped from 408 to 218.- Mammals fell from 129 to 74.
– Reptiles decreased from 135 to 59 between march 31, 2024, and April 1, 2024.
– Central Zoo Authority (CZA) formed a three-member team with experts from institutions like the Wildlife Institute of India and Indian Veterinary Research Institute. A report is due within a week.
– West Bengal forest department launched a separate investigation lead by a Principal Chief Conservator of Forests; results expected in two weeks.
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(Credit: Samir Jana / Hindustan Times)
The discrepancies regarding animal inventory records at Kolkata’s historic Alipore Zoological Garden raise serious concerns about accountability, record maintenance systems, and the broader issue of wildlife management in protected spaces. While physical verification might resolve questions about these so-called missing animals,recurring problems with data accuracy suggest systemic inefficiencies or lack of oversight.
Both investigations by the CZA and West Bengal forest department are welcome developments towards addressing transparency concerns. However, automation or digitization reforms are essential to mitigate manual errors highlighted here as root causes.
Further attention is required because such issues extend beyond recordkeeping-clear mismanagement risks could perhaps lead to jeopardized species welfare or complicate conservation reporting standards. Public pressure via forums like Swazon may prompt necessary structural reforms both at the local zoo management level as well as national zoo administration guidelines.