On 13 September 2010, the intention to create a Bor Tiger Reserve was announced by the then
Minister of Environment and Forests,
Jairam Ramesh. The Maharashtra Forest Department later decided that the Bor Wildlife Sanctuary is too small to be declared as a tiger reserve. It has become the 47th tiger reserve in India with Environment Minister
Prakash Javadekar notifying it as a tiger reserve with an aim to strengthen the conservation efforts of the national animal on 7 July 2014. "It is not practical to declare Bor a reserve. It is well connected to
Pench Tiger Reserve and Mansingdeo wildlife sanctuary adjoining Pench, and is also a
wildlife corridor. All this area will now be part of Pench", said S.K. Khetarpal,
Principal Chief Conservator of Forests (PCCF) for Wildlife, Maharashtra. Bor sanctuary will now be extended to . It will include the existing sanctuary area of and adjoining from Nagpur and from Wardha division. The expanded Bor will be a 'satellite' core of the Pench along with Mansingdeo sanctuary. If these three areas are fully consolidated, Pench will then become , a 2.14 times increase in area. "The Bor sanctuary is an important 'satellite' area which has the potential to serve as a 'stepping stone' for tigers dispersing from the source area of Pench", ==Conservation==