Sign up for our Free email Newsletter
and get all the latest wildlife news!
Choose:

Rehabilitating bears to the wild – India’s bear keepers.

27/11/2008 10:16:55
news/sept_2008/Bears_manas_walking_wti

Bears walking in Manas NP with their keepers. Credit WTI.

November 2008: Every morning, Nath and Krishna, IFAW-WTI's animal keepers wake up to the impatient squeals of four Asiatic black bears in the temporary camp site in Manas National Park. The bears, rescued as orphans, have been undergoing gradual acclimatisation to their natural habitat since August 2008. As part of their soft-release, being carried out by the Assam Forest Department and IFAW-WTI, they are being walked daily in the lush green moist-deciduous and semi-evergreen forests along Indo-Bhutan border, where they will eventually be released.

The bears are kept in tree-top cages at night, and as soon as the cage doors are opened, the older bears, Kumar and Kumari, descend to the ground and start sniffing for any new smells, the remnants of wild visitors from the previous night. The third cub, Manasi, warily follows suit. She is usually unnerved by the domineering Kumari, but is willing to risk approaching the latter in the presence of her surrogate parents, Nath and Krishna.

Educating bears
As Nath heads into the forest, Kumar, Kumari and Manas promptly follow him, to begin another day of their education. They need to learn to find their food, to avoid danger including humans and pick up other survival skills, before they can be freed of the guardianship of their caretakers.

Dheki, the fourth cub, is the most timid of all and always tries to avoid the bigger bears. He was very weak and traumatised during his rescue; it is difficult to imagine the experience he has been through. However, he seems to be responding positively to the affection of his foster parents. A polite egging from Krishna encourages him to follow the others, albeit at a distance.

Bears playing in Manas. Credit WTI.

Bears playing in Manas. Credit WTI.

Walks in the forest
During the walks in the forest, the bears attempt to climb a variety of trees in search of food or for play. Sometimes, they overestimate their abilities and come crashing down, especially the youngest cub Dheki. But that is a natural learning process...and they move on.

The keepers always encourage the bears to explore the forest independently, rather than trail them around. They purposely try and avoid the cubs, while ensuring that they are never too far away. This is essential, to make them understand that wilderness, and not humans, is their source for food.

After about four hours of walking, Nath signals for the bears to return. The bears run to the keepers, who escort them back to the camp site. Krishna reaches the camp before Nath and the bears. He quickly puts supplementary food in the cages before the bears can see him, to prevent habituating the bears from humans feeding them.
Life is not easy for Nath and Krishna, being away from their homes and families for months at a stretch. Lucky for them, they have cellphone connectivity in the remote forest, and this is their only means of contact to the outside world. They spend their evenings discussing the day's experience and preparing for the next day; quiet companions amidst the calls of the wild.

Courtesy of the Wildlife Trust of India

Read the comments about this article and leave your own comment

To post a comment you must be logged in.
CLICK HERE TO LOG IN AND POST A COMMENT

New user? Register here

 

Click join and we will email you with your password. You can then sign on and join the discussions right away.