A survey of fishing cat numbers in areas with high human density in West Bengal has revealed that the major reason for their decline is the degradation of wetland habitats. A cat that depends on wetlands and marshes also symbiotically helps preserve this crucial ecosystem, observes Atula Gupta. India is home to 15 species of…
Staking Claim To The Same Pie
Sasan Gir National Park in Gujarat is still the last bastion of the Asiatic lion, and the local Maldharis have lived peacefully with the wild cat. What is upsetting the fragile natural balance is the increasing livestock population that is competing with the wild ungulates for the same forest sources, observes Atula Gupta. Sasan Gir…
Will The Tiger Paparazzi Keep Away?
The Supreme Court’s order of banning tiger safaris in core areas of all the 42 tigerreserves in the country was made with a simple reasoning – to provide the tiger withmuch needed solitude and let the big cat enjoy its kingdom without the houndingpaparazzi. But leaving the tiger alone is the last thing in the…
When The Hunter Turns Saviour
When the tiger is saved, it sets off a domino effect that saves its prey, their food source and every small and big species thriving in the vast habitat. The tiger thus ensures that the entire kingdom is safe, observes Atula Gupta The kingdom of an emperor is defined by its geography and its dwellers…
A Burning Concern
Over 3,500 ha of Nagarhole and 2,000 ha of Bandipur Tiger Reserve were destroyed in a recent fire. In the cycle of life and death that is part of Nature, wild fires cause destruction so that regeneration may take place. But when human beings err, things can take a tragic turn, writes Atula Gupta. Normally, the…
Thailand’s Jumbo Secret
The discovery of six slaughtered elephants in two of Thailand’s national parks last month has exposed a nasty secret about the country’s elephant tourism industry. Conservationists point out that baby elephant trade is a lucrative business in the country, writes Atula GuptaThailand’s booming tourism industry owes much of its success to the gentle pachyderm. The…
What Frogs Tell Us About The Planet
A team of scientists at Kalakad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve reason that analysing sound recordings of frog croaking combined with readings from climate data loggers could improve our understanding of the effect of climate change on amphibian populations, writes Atula Gupta Sitting 100 feet above the ground, in the dense canopies of the Kalakad Mundanthurai Tiger…
Some Good News And Some Not So Good
Tiger numbers shot up to 1,706 this year from 1,411 in 2008. Was this good news or did it deepen the worry lines on conservationists’ faces? It has been that kind of a year for most species. Some good, some bad; some species recovering, some others vanishing, writes Atula Gupta In the beginning of 2011,…
End Of The Road For Flamingos?
Travel through the Rann of Kutch in winters and the eyes see nothing but barren, white cracked land with not a single patch of green to signal life and break the monotony. But come here during the monsoons and the extremity of the morphological changes can easily amaze and astound. As sea, river and rainwater…
Reality Stings
Imagine a world without flowers. A world where there are no fruit-laden trees and no seeds to germinate into a new plant. Such a world is quite frankly, unimaginable. And yet, our planet is moving towards that future because those little things that keep the myriad lifecycles of nature going are themselves disappearing. We are…