iDNES.cz / TV program


nahrávám

LOOKING FOR SULTAN

  • 27. 11. 2024, 18:55

Despite efforts to protect tigers for the past 4 decades, tigers continue to be hunted down - poached, poisoned and squeezed into small pockets of protected forests.Tigers play a pivotal role in maintaining the health of the forest ecosystem and there is an urgent need to protect the tiger and its habitat.In India and across the world, Tigers have captured our imagination for centuries. We have feared them, respected them and even worshipped them. But during the colonial times tigers were hunted in thousands.At the turn of the century over a 100,000 tigers existed on the planet. Almost 40,000 of these were in India. But today only 3800 tigers survive across the world and 70% of these are in India.Today each and every tiger is important and that’s why we need to find Sultan.This film follows the story of Sultan, the up and coming dominant tiger of Ranthambore Tiger Reserve who vanished suddenly.Father and son wildlife filmmakers, Mike and Gautam, had been following and filming him since he was a cub and are now trying to put the pieces together to solve this mystery.More than 12 tigers have gone missing in Ranthambhore between 2012 and 2017. Young tigers who go missing are usually thought to have been poached or just lost forever. But the story is much more complicated.Tigers are born in parks and forests - a safe, secure place protected by their mother. But once these tigers mature they must find new homes but the question is where will they go? Trackers on ground have proved that tigers leave the protected territory of national parks to walk great distances in search for new territory. Tigers know no borders and young sub adult tigers must walk hundreds of kilometres to find a new home, prey and a new mate. Once they walk out of the protected area of the forest they are in direct contact with human habitation. People and tigers now share a complicated relationship - one of constant fear of the other.This is the story all across the country. Isolated populations of tigers in small fragmented forests surrounded by human beings and villages. The film looks at broader issues of conservation of tigers and their relationship with the people who share their habitat and the different efforts being made towards conservation in India through the story of Sultan.

Přidat do mého TV programu

Hlavní zprávy

Ministra vnitra Vít Rakušan po jednání se zástupci odborů bezpečnostních...
STAN v průzkumu poprvé poráží ODS, do Sněmovny by opět prošli komunisté

Volby do Poslanecké sněmovny by v listopadu vyhrálo ANO se ziskem 35,3 procenta. Za ním by se umístilo hnutí STAN, které by volilo 11,1 procenta Čechů a Češek....  celý článek

Izraelský premiér Benjamin Netanjahu a ministr obrany Joav Galant (28. října...
Mezinárodní trestní soud vydal zatykač na Netanjahua kvůli válce v Gaze

Mezinárodní trestní soud vydal zatykače na izraelského premiéra Benjamina Netanjahua a někdejšího ministra obrany Joava Galanta za údajné válečné zločiny...  celý článek

Ukrajinský prezident Volodymyr Zelenskyj s dánskou premiérkou Mettou...
Nemáme tolik lidí, abychom umírali při osvobozování Krymu, řekl Zelenskyj

Ukrajinský prezident Volodymyr Zelenskyj v rozhovoru pro stanici Fox News uvedl, že Ukrajina nechce marnit životy svých vojáků pokusem o osvobození Krymu a...  celý článek

TV program na celý týden: ČT1, ČT2, Nova, Prima, Nova Cinema, Nova 2, Nova Action, Nova Gold, Prima Cool, Prima Love, Prima ZOOM, Barrandov

Najdete na iDNES.cz

mobilní verze
© 1998–2024 MAFRA, a. s. a dodavatelé Profimedia, Reuters, ČTK, AP. Jakékoliv užití obsahu včetně převzetí, šíření či dalšího zpřístupňování článků a fotografií je bez souhlasu MAFRA, a. s. zakázáno. Provozovatelem serveru iDNES.cz je MAFRA, a. s. se sídlem
Karla Engliše 519/11, 150 00 Praha 5, IČ: 45313351, zapsaná v obchodním rejstříku vedeném Městským soudem v Praze, oddíl B, vložka 1328.