Beyond Protected Areas News

Protected areas only cover about 5.02 percent of India’s total area. Consequently, a large percentage of India’s wildlife live outside protected boundaries. This gives rise to situations spanning between coexistence and conflict, which requires acknowledgement and awareness. With just five percent of India’s total forest cover officially protected, sharing habitat with humans is the reality for much of India’s diverse wildlife. In western Maharashtra, for example, every 100 square kilometers of land is home to 10 large carnivores (leopards and hyenas) -- and more than 30,000 people. In India, a protected area (PA) is defined as a zone “in which human occupation or at least the exploitation of resources is limited.” These PAs include national parks, wildlife sanctuaries, conservation reserves, community reserves and marine protected areas. In this series, Beyond Protected Areas, Mongabay-India will be addressing the urgent need to raise awareness of practices which make the land surrounding official protected areas more supportive of wildlife. One of the main threats to biodiversity outside protected areas is widespread infrastructure development, including linear incursions like roads and railways. The resultant habitat fragmentation splits up wildlife populations, causing an overall reduction in genetic diversity, which in turn decreases the resilience of species to pressures such as climate change and diseases. In this context, large carnivores prey upon livestock, while herbivores such as elephants, nilgai and wild boar damage crops. Human-wildlife conflict seems inevitable, but there are novel solutions that have come to light from across the country. We explore biodiversity and communities along the spectrum between conflict and coexistence, from across the country.

Scientists develop a toolkit to identify high conservation-value areas

Call to save rare snake habitat follows red coral kukri sightings in Bangladesh

Small cats in big trouble: Why we need to save these elusive endangered species

Rising tiger population is said to aggravate human-tiger conflict in Chandrapur, Gadchiroli

Questions arise about Project Cheetah as three cheetahs die in 45 days

Nepal comes next in line to Sri Lanka to debate exporting ‘problematic’ monkeys

Why are Idu Mishmis resisting a proposed tiger reserve in Dibang Valley?

The return of wild boars in Kashmir threatens the hangul habitat and crops

A hill town in Nilgiris district pays the price for poor waste management

Environmentalists denounce Sri Lanka’s talks of exporting 100,000 crop-raiding macaques

[Video] Combatting wildlife crime with technology

Roadkill instances in Jammu and Kashmir increase as highways lengthen

The love for momos in Nepal is threatening endangered wild water buffaloes

Evolutionary lineages of the banded krait discovered through molecular methods

[Interview] Conservationist MK Ranjitsinh Jhala on the need for a grassland policy in India

Women take the wheel for safer tourism in Satpura Tiger Reserve

Habitat preservation in the Western Ghats can help enhance biodiversity in the hotspot

Climate change and catfight in the Himalayas: tigers, leopards venture into snow leopard land

Mapping connectivity and human-elephant conflict in Karnataka

Despite efforts and funds, human-wildlife conflict in Uttarakhand is not contained

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