Tracking tigers in India
A tigress walks along a ridgeline in Kanha National Park. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
Chicago Tribune
You can go to Africa for cheetahs or lions, but for Bengal tigers, your best bet is the wildlife reserves at the heart of the Indian subcontinent in the so-called “Tiger State” of Madhya Pradesh.
A wildlife spotter from the local Baiga tribe scans the horizon in Kanha National Park. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
Gray langurs have a symbiotic relationship with deer in the parks of Madhya Pradesh, warning each other of approaching tigers. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
Kanha Earth Lodge, a Pugdundee Safaris property, is in the buffer zone about 20 minutes beyond the national park’s gates. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
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A woman stands in front of her home in a Baiga village near Kanha National Park. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
A male tiger lounges in the brush of Bandhavgarh National Park. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
A tribal woman draws water from a well in one of the Gond villages near Bandhavgarh National Park. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
Kanha National Park was one of the first wildlife reserves set up in the 1970s under the conservation program Project Tiger. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune )
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The wildlife reserves of Madhya Pradesh are home to numerous types of kingfishers, including this stork-billed kingfisher. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
Looking for fresh prints along the dirt roads is one of the best ways spotters can track tigers. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
The early morning mist rises with the sun in Kanha National Park. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
Sambar are the largest deer in India. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
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Spotted deer are top tiger prey and some of the most common animals in Madhya Pradesh. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
A male tiger awaits the arrival of a tigress, the mother of his two cubs, in Kanha National Park. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune )
A pair of noisy jungle babblers sit in a tree in Bandhavgarh National Park. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune)
A spotted owlet enjoys the camouflage of a leafy tree. (Mark Johanson/for the Chicago Tribune )