Eurasian Lynx Photographed in Sikkim
Local
Share
AI REPORT
3 min read

Eurasian Lynx Photographed in Sikkim

BN

Curated By

BatchNode Editorial Desk

The elusive Eurasian lynx has been photographed for the first time in Sikkim, marking only the second photographic record of the species in the Eastern Himalayas. The rare wild cat was captured on a camera trap in January this year at an altitude of 5,250 metres on the remote Tso Lhamo plateau in Mangan district. The photograph provides the first confirmed evidence of the species’ presence in Sikkim, ending years of anecdotal reports about the lynx inhabiting the state’s high-altitude landscapes.

The record emerged from a long-term snow leopard and rangeland monitoring programme jointly undertaken by the Sikkim Forest and Environment Department and WWF-India to study the distribution of snow leopards and other high-altitude wildlife. The discovery comes barely a year after the first-ever photographic record of the Eurasian lynx in the Eastern Himalayas was documented in Arunachal Pradesh in 2025. Conservationists say the two records together suggest that the species has a wider distribution across the Eastern Himalayas than previously believed.

Chief Conservator of Forests (Wildlife), Sikkim, Udai Gurung, said, “The photographic confirmation of the Eurasian lynx in the Tso Lhamo plateau is a proud moment for Sikkim. It highlights the ecological significance of our high-altitude rangelands and reinforces our commitment to protecting these fragile ecosystems.” A medium-sized wild cat known for its distinctive tufted ears and short tail, the Eurasian lynx is adapted to cold and rugged mountain environments. The latest findings also underscore the rich biodiversity of the Tso Lhamo plateau, a cold desert ecosystem that supports an impressive assemblage of wildlife.

Camera traps deployed in the area also recorded species such as the snow leopard, Pallas’s cat, Tibetan wolf, Tibetan sand fox, Tibetan gazelle, Tibetan argali and southern kiang, highlighting the plateau’s importance as one of India’s least-studied high-altitude ecosystems. WWF-India’s Head of Himalayas Programme, Dr. Rishi Kumar Sharma, said the Sikkim record confirms that the Eurasian lynx has a broader presence in the Eastern Himalayas than previously understood. He stressed the need for long-term monitoring to better understand and protect these fragile landscapes.

The survey, however, also flagged emerging conservation concerns, including increasing vehicular movement, waste management issues and a growing population of free-ranging dogs, which could threaten wildlife and livestock in the region.

Experimental Hub

Welcome to thehmars.
This is an experimental, automated portal. Just a heads up:

  • Raw Feeds: Content is scraped and posted by scripts, so there's no manual editing or fact-checking.
  • Desktop First: The website is optimized for desktop only. Mobile and tablet devices may experience layout issues or unexpected behavior.
  • Work in Progress: The donation and newsletter systems have been temporarily paused while we upgrade our internal systems.

Spot a bug, want to contribute, or interested in getting a portal setup like this built for yourself? I'd love to chat—reach out via the contact form!