Coexistence in regions of co-occurrence?
Our latest research paper, published in 'Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution', highlights the implementation, design, and impact of the Wild Seve program.
Our latest research paper, published in 'Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution', highlights the implementation, design, and impact of the Wild Seve program.
ಅಂತರರಾಷ್ಟ್ರೀಯ ನಿಯತಕಾಲಿಕೆಯಾದ 'ಫ್ರಾಂಟಿಯರ್ಸ್ ಇನ್ ಈಕಾಲಜಿ ಅಂಡ್ ಎವಲ್ಯೂಷನ್'ನಲ್ಲಿ ಪ್ರಕಟವಾಗಿರುವ CWSನ ಇತ್ತೀಚಿನ ಅಧ್ಯಯನ, ಜುಲೈ ೨೦೧೫ರಿಂದ ಜೂನ್ ೨೦೧೯ರ ನಡುವೆ ವೈಲ್ಡ್ ಸೇವೆ ಯೋಜನೆಯ ಕಾರ್ಯರೂಪ, ವಿನ್ಯಾಸ, ಮತ್ತು ಪ್ರಭಾವಗಳನ್ನು ವಿವರಿಸಿದೆ.
The study titled Wild Seve: A Novel Conservation Intervention to Monitor and Address Human-Wildlife Conflict is published in the journal, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution.
Our Chief Conservation Scientist Dr. Krithi Karanth was one of the speakers at the ‘Tech for Sustainability' Launch Party on the 21st of November at [...]
In rural India, relationships between humans and large mammals are increasingly fractured. In this Monocle podcast, Dr. Krithi K. Karanth tells us how Wild Seve [...]
In the last three years, Bandipore National Park and Nagarhole National Park in Karnataka have recorded 10,000 instances of human-animal conflict, shows data from the [...]
Late on July 8, on the fringes of Bandipur National Park, a farmer in Shivapura village heard noises from his livestock shed. Moments later, he [...]
WCS’s Wild Seve program, which helps farmers living around India’s Bandipur and Nagarahole National Parks recoup losses of crops or livestock from tigers, leopards, elephants, [...]
With growing human populations overlapping with forests that are rich wildlife habitats, increasing interactions between people and animals are inevitable. Rural communities of India are [...]
Shrinking wildlife spaces are highlighting the fragility of the complex relationship between people and wildlife in rural and urban India. People-wildlife interactions lead to crop [...]