Nilgai remains have been excavated at
Pandu Rajar Dhibi in
West Bengal, suggesting that it was domesticated or hunted in
eastern India in the
Neolithic period (6500–1400 BCE) and during the
Indus Valley Civilisation (3300–1700 BCE). There is a reference to the nilgai in the
Aitareya Brahmana (a
Hindu religious text dated 500–1000 BCE), where one of the
Prajapatis is said to have assumed the form of a nilgai: for
Jahangir (1605–27), c. 1620 The nilgai is extensively featured in paintings, dagger hilts and texts from the
Mughal era; its representation, however, is less frequent than that of horses and camels. On being disturbed while hunting nilgai, the Mughal emperor
Jahangir recorded his ire. For centuries Indian villagers have associated the nilgai with the
cow, a sacred animal revered by
Hindus, and the name ("gai" means "cow" in Hindi) indicates the similarity they saw with the cow. The nilgai is rarely consumed by Hindus due to its religious significance. Tribes such as the
Bishnois traditionally take care of wild animals like the nilgai. The nilgai was not widely hunted until the 20th century, when habitat degradation and poaching became rampant. The meat of nilgai is said to be lighter and milder flavoured than
blackbuck meat.
Culling and conservation The populations of nilgai in India are so large that farmers in the states of
Bihar,
Chhattisgarh,
Haryana,
Madhya Pradesh,
Maharashtra,
Rajasthan and
Uttar Pradesh have pleaded to the government to cull them. Nilgai herds raid and trample crop fields across these states, often causing food shortages. Farmers use live electric wires to guard their farms, which kills other animals as well. Farmers in
Neemuch (Madhya Pradesh) went on a hunger strike in 2015 demanding compensation for the damage caused by nilgai. Although blackbuck cause a similar problem, the damage caused by them is significantly lower as they merely break off young shoots. In 1990, it was suggested that
culling, building enclosures for the antelopes and fencing off agricultural areas as remedies. and
Uttarakhand have urged the
Government of India to declare the nilgai as
vermin; the proposal has been implemented in Bihar, where nilgai can now be hunted to minimise the damages incurred by locals. The
Uttar Pradesh government has given farmers and firearm licence holders the right to cull the animals. However, animal rights activists in various parts of India were unhappy with the decision. Shivanshu K. Srivastava, a
columnist and
social activist, wrote that "The culling of nilgais (blue bulls) in Bihar in July 2016 was so deplorable that it doesn't need any justification. The excuse given for this slew by the State government, the then environment minister Prakash Javadekar and the judiciary is so illogical that it mocks all the solutions available to stop the nilgais from destroying the farms. We live in the 21st century and culling is only the very last option we have. The farmers can either opt for fencing around the farmlands or if it's unaffordable, then the government can give ordinances to relocate them to the forests." The state governments have attempted other initiatives to curb the nilgai: in November 2015, the
Government of Rajasthan came up with a proposal to allow shooting nilgai with non-lethal darts to inhibit
fertilisation in their bodies, so as to regulate their increasing populations. As the name "nilgai" appeals to the religious sentiments of Hindus, the
Government of Madhya Pradesh has sought to officially rename it (Hindi for "forest antelope") and the Government of Haryana to rename it as
roze in a bid to make their culling acceptable. in 1994, it becamer known that the nilgai's faeces contains nearly 1.6 percent nitrogen, which could enhance the quality of the soil up to a depth of . Seeds in the droppings could easily germinate and assist in afforestation. In September 2019, a video surfaced of a nilgai being buried alive with an excavator in Bihar as part of the culling. The state forest department has claimed to have begun an investigation to find those responsible. ==References==