A special cage installed to capture boars straying in farmlands from forest  Photo | Express
Tamil Nadu

Two wild boars shot dead to prevent crop damage in TN

The carcasses were examined, and samples were collected for testing before being chemically treated and buried nearby.

Express News Service

TIRUNELVELI: For the first time in the district, two wild boars were shot dead near Ulupadipparai village near Ambasamudram on Thursday by a team formed by the Kalakkad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve administration as part of a state government-sanctioned operation to prevent crop damage in farmlands bordering forests.

According to forest officials, the operation was carried out by field staff of the Ambasamudram forest range around 3 am after a herd of wild boars was spotted in patta land near the KMTR boundary.

“The animals were shot as per a government order, dated January 9, 2025, which permits regulated measures to control wild boar-related crop destruction. The carcasses were examined, and samples were collected for testing before being chemically treated and buried nearby.

The district-level committee, including Collector Dr R Sukumar and Deputy Director (Wildlife Warden) of KMTR L C S Sreekanth, approved the action. Prior to the operation, Ambasamudram forest personnel received training on safe and precise shooting,” forest officials said in a statement.

Forest staff have also been conducting night-time monitoring to drive wild boars back into forest areas within 1 km of the reserve boundary. Special cages have been installed to capture boars straying 1 to 3 km outside the protected zone and release them back into the forest, the statement read.

Mamata returns to her favourite sit-in spot for another dharna, is a battle royale assured?

‘Shameful and unprecedented’: PM Modi slams Mamata for insulting President Murmu

LIVE | West Asia conflict: Trump says he’ll hit Iran harder; Tehran claims 'a number' of US soldiers captured

Governors tighten Centre’s political grip

Narrative wars, faith factor and turncoats: Kerala's unpredictable election thriller

SCROLL FOR NEXT