It is becoming increasingly evident that tourism in wildlife areas can have unintended impacts on animal behaviour and wellbeing. A study by scientists at the CSIR–Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology has found that tourism and human activity inside tiger reserves may be increasing stress levels in tigers and influencing where tigresses choose to breed, raising concerns about the long-term health of India’s big cat population. Published in the journal Animal Conservation, the research tracked tigers across five reserves over two years and four seasons, making it one of the largest multi-reserve physiological studies of wild tigers in India. Researchers, however, said tourism should be managed more scientifically rather than restricted completely.

