The Central Zoo Authority (CZA), India's governmental body under the Ministry of Environment and Forests, has asked the local forestry department to stop the construction of a tiger safari which violates wildlife norms in the state's Pench National Park, famous for being the setting of Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book.
Within the tiger safari construction plan, the state government planned to cut down over 550 trees in the park to make way for the safari, which "is detrimental to tiger dispersal which has altered their land tenure dynamics, resulting in tiger dispersal in human dominated landscapes which exposes them to poaching events."
Over the past century tiger numbers have fallen dramatically, with a decreasing population trending even further downward. Declining number of tigers is a major issue for India, home to 70% of the world's total tiger population. Efforts to save India's national animal have been made by the country's government, pushing for an international collaboration to help conserve the tiger.