Panna National Park was declared as one of the
Tiger reserves of India in 1994/95 and placed under the protection of
Project Tiger. Two female tigers were relocated there from
Bandhavgarh National Park and
Kanha National Park in March 2009. However, the last male tiger had already disappeared. A committee to look into the disappearance of the tigers was formed. In June 2009, it was officially announced that the Reserve, which had over 40 tigers six years earlier, had no tigers left and only two tigresses, which were brought in a little earlier In February 2012, only three years later, the entire tiger population of the reserve was considered eliminated. The Madhya Pradesh government did not determine responsibility for the debacle, nor did it pass the inquiry to the
Central Bureau of Investigation in spite of requests from the Ministry of Environment and Forests and the Prime Minister's Office. The
Ministry of Environment and Forests approved a proposal to translocate two tigers and two tigresses to the reserve. One female each from
Bandhavgarh National Park (coded T1) and
Kanha National Park (T2) were translocated to
Panna Tiger Reserve. A tiger male, coded T3, was brought from
Pench Tiger Reserve but strayed out of the park shortly thereafter, in November 2009 The tiger started walking towards its home in
Pench National Park, indicating homing instinct. It moved steadily through human dominated landscape without causing any conflict. Forest department staff tracked it continuously for over a month and finally brought it back to Panna Tiger Reserve. It then settled well, established territory and started mating. The tigress, T1, translocated from Bandhavgarh National Park, gave birth to four cubs in April 2010 of which 2 survive till date. Her sister T5 was released in Panna in November 2011. ==Panna Biosphere Reserve==