Academic literature on the topic 'Wildlife conservation, india'

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Journal articles on the topic "Wildlife conservation, india"

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Kumar Joshi, Ashvini. "Pioneering Female Zoologists in India: Advocates for Wildlife Conservation." International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR) 12, no. 12 (December 5, 2023): 524–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.21275/sr231203173415.

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Kanipakam, Sunitha. "BIODIVERSITY - WILDLIFE CONSERVATION LAWS IN INDIA." International Journal of Advanced Research 5, no. 12 (December 31, 2017): 1110–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.21474/ijar01/6064.

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Swamy, J., and V. Jalander. "Grass Species Diversity and Conservation in Shivaram Wildlife Sanctuary, Telangana, India." Indian Journal of Pure & Applied Biosciences 12, no. 2 (April 30, 2024): 26–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.18782/2582-2845.9080.

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This study delves into the diversity of grass species within the Shivaram Wildlife Sanctuary, located in Telangana State, identifying 51 species belonging to 36 genera and 7 tribes. Among the seven tribes, Andropogoneae dominated with 18 species and 15 genera, followed by Paniceae with 12 species and 9 genera, Cynodonteae with 9 species and 8 genera and Eragrostideae, Aristideae, Paspaleae, and Bambuseae are represented by each single genus and 6, 3, 2, and 1 species respectively. Preserving this diversity is vital for ecosystem resilience amid environmental changes. Conservation efforts are needed to safeguard the sanctuary's grasslands, which are ecologically and culturally significant. Our research informs wildlife management and habitat restoration strategies, emphasizing holistic biodiversity conservation and sustainability approaches.
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Gonekar, Dr Vijay, and Mamta Goyal Gonekar. "Wildlife conservation in India: Issues and challenges." International Journal of Geography, Geology and Environment 6, no. 1 (January 1, 2024): 242–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.22271/27067483.2024.v6.i1d.226.

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Balajapalli, Sudha, and Younsung Kim. "Controlling Wildlife Crime: The Positive Role of Workforce Capacity in Protected Areas." Public Administration Research 13, no. 2 (July 3, 2024): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/par.v13n2p1.

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Wildlife crime has been problematic in Assam, India, and Asian tigers, rhinos, and elephants are trafficked through illegal international networks mainly due to market demand. Against illicit poaching of wildlife, the Indian government has established protected areas that are managed by state forest departments in India. Despite this practice, little is known if workforce capacity can lead to effective wildlife management by controlling poaching threats. Using frontline staff numbers and salary as proxy variables, we conducted a novel empirical analysis for the relationship between workforce capacity and population size of endangered tigers, rhinos, and elephants in the Dibru Saikhowa, Kaziranga, Nemeri, and Orang national parks in Assam, India. The findings illustrate the need to enhance work capacity for tiger and rhino conservation and potential poaching control in protected areas of the Global South where conservation relies on human workforce capacity rather than sophisticated monitoring technologies.
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Saberwal, Vasant K. "Conservation as politics: Wildlife conservation and resource management in India." Journal of International Wildlife Law & Policy 3, no. 2 (January 2000): 166–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13880290009353954.

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Mansi, Mansi, Rakesh Pandey, and Carolyn Stringer. "Biodiversity reporting in India: a view from the top." Corporate Ownership and Control 12, no. 1 (2014): 418–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.22495/cocv12i1c4p5.

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The purpose of this study is to explore the biodiversity reporting practices inside Indian companies. Biodiversity reporting studies across Indian companies are important because India has a wealth of biodiversity assets, that is, wildlife, flora, fauna, natural habitats, rare and endangered species and biological resources, and accounts for 7.8% of the global recorded species (Biological Diversity Act, the Biodiversity Rules, Andhra Pradesh Biodiversity Board, 2009). There are approximately 45,500 species of plants, 91,200 species of animals and 5,550 microbial species documented in India (National Biodiversity Authority, 2014). The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has listed 132 species of animals and plants in the Critically Endangered Category (Sudhi, 2012). To date, the literature omits to explore the biodiversity reporting practices inside Indian companies. Another important reason to conduct is this study is that India has alarming population levels; thus there is a huge demand for land, energy, and resources, which leads to massive biodiversity loss, deforestation, and habitat destruction. It is very likely that with the limited land mass and increasing population in India, several ecosystems, wildlife, flora and fauna will be/have been exploited, disturbed, and endangered. Given the high potential impact on biodiversity by industries, we are concerned that there is a dearth of biodiversity reporting studies within the Indian subcontinent. We concentrate on the largest companies (based on market capitalisation) because similar to Van Liempd and Busch (2013), we also expect that the largest companies have the greatest impact on biodiversity; therefore, they are expected to show more accountability to their stakeholders. Therefore it is worth exploring how Indian companies are engaging in biodiversity reporting practices (e.g. biodiversity conservation, biodiversity protection, habitat and ecosystem conservation); and whether these organisations are disclosing their impact(s) (both in quantity and quality) on biodiversity (such as wildlife, flora and fauna). Moreover, India has also been classified as one of 17 mega-diversity countries by The World Conservation Monitoring Centre which account for more than 70% of the planet’s species (Williams, 2001). All these reasons make this study timely and important.
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Balajapalli, Sudha, and Younsung Kim. "Anti-Poaching for Endangered Megafauna Conservation in Assam, India: Examining Stakeholder Perception." Journal of Public Policy and Administration 8, no. 1 (April 2, 2024): 33–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.11648/j.jppa.20240801.15.

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India is the stronghold for endangered species and poaching and illegal trade have seriously threatened wildlife conservation. Against this backdrop, Indian regulatory authorities have strengthened workforce capacity for monitoring and enforcement actions against poaching, employed patrolling systems, and adopted lethal deterrence-based policies. However, efforts to control poaching and conserve biodiversity are often at odds with local communities' needs and interests, and stakeholder participation in management is integral to successful wildlife conservation. This research aims to understand stakeholder perception of anti-poaching management practices and tribal customs in protected areas. A survey was conducted to gather information from forest staff and fringe villagers at the four national parks and one wildlife sanctuary in Assam, India. The results indicate that villagers around protected areas generally perceive that the Forest Department and patrolling effectively prevent poaching. However, stakeholders' perceptions of the lethal deterrence-based policies and tribal customs were split, depending on the local communities' unique social, economic, and political situations. Leveraging these responses, wildlife managers in India can collaborate with villagers around the protected areas to address the threats of poaching to wild megafauna. Further, this research underpins the reason to strengthen the enforcement capacity of forest staff, as they stand at the frontline of endangered species protection in biodiversity-rich, developing countries.
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SINGH, Renu, Janmejay SETHY, and Deepali CHATRATH. "TRENDS AND PATTERNS OF ILLEGAL WILDLIFE HUNTING AND TRADING IN UTTAR PRADESH, INDIA." International Journal of Conservation Science 14, no. 1 (March 15, 2023): 307–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.36868/ijcs.2023.01.21.

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Wildlife trade, poaching and its use is characterized as wildlife crime, also it has become a global problem. The illegal wildlife trade is a increasing problem driven by the number of factors (e.g. alternative medicine, accessories and subsistence). High demand for illicit wildlife products is threatening the existence of many of the most of d species. Enquiring and investigating crime hotspots include analyzing the enforcement of law and seizure data, highlighting areas with high biodiversity has been studied here. In this present study, we have analyzed wildlife crime hotspot in different districts/ divisions of Uttar Pradesh, India from 2012 to 2021.Basically, we have extracted the data which include information on trafficking, illegal possessions, breaking hunting and poaching laws and exploitation, illegal scientific collections, and information from mass media. In results, study support the understanding that the reports of illegal trade are underestimates. This research helps to gain the understanding the exact reason to the problem. This study also supports to inform policies and strategies to combat the poaching and hunting activities that affect wildlife in regions with high biodiversity. Moreover, this also provides the first detailed state of assessment on illegal trade and hunting in Uttar Pradesh. The analysis done suggests trade in wildlife in protected areas of 12 districts of Uttar Pradesh and hike in trade of mammalian species, like Indian Pangolin, and leopard. In addition, the seizure reported more often in different districts and areas bordering Nepal, China, and gulf countries. This states that well-organized illegal wildlife trade and associations taking place in Uttar Pradesh and gulf countries act as both a source and a transit country.
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Narayan, Trupthi, and Pankaj Sekhsaria. "Media reporting on the protected areas in Maharashtra, India: a thematic analysis." Journal of Threatened Taxa 11, no. 3 (February 26, 2019): 13360–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.11609/jott.4461.11.3.13360-13376.

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This research paper is an account and analysis of English media reporting on wildlife conservation and protected areas (PAs) in Maharashtra, India, between 1994 and 2015. It is based on 269 articles that first appeared in the media and were then edited for publication in the ‘Protected Area Update’. The analysis attempts to draw out significant themes that the media deems important in matters of wildlife conservation. Themes that emerge prominently are related to issues of land, displacement of people, development projects, and tourism. We also discovered that some PAs like the Sanjay Gandhi National Park and the Tadoba-Andhari Tiger Reserve receive disproportionately large media space, while a third of the PAs were not reported on at all. This does not imply that these areas were not reported in the larger media that the newsletter draws upon, but points to the skewed coverage and (limited) importance these PAs get. We argue that media content analysis is a useful tool because the media is the first interface for the general public on issues of wildlife conservation and plays an important role in shaping public opinion. To our knowledge, this is the first such state-wide study of media reporting of wildlife conservation issues; it provides important insights into the wildlife conservation discourse in the country as well as the concerns, priorities, and challenges of the media.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Wildlife conservation, india"

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Botteron, Cynthia Ann. "What the study of tiger preservation in India reveals about science, advocacy, and policy change /." Full text (PDF) from UMI/Dissertation Abstracts International, 2000. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/fullcit?p3004219.

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Das, Priya Duttashree. "Politics of participatory conservation : a case of Kailadevi Wildlife Sanctuary, Rajasthan, India." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 2011. http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/14566/.

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Niraj, Shekhar Kumar. "Sustainable Development, Poaching, and Illegal Wildlife Trade in India." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194196.

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Wildlife poaching is directly associated with illegal wildlife trade. Although poaching is recognized as a major threat to wildlife in India, it has not been analyzed quantitatively, because of a lack of data. Thus, the understanding of poaching or illegal wildlife trade and its true implications on conservation has not been considered by policymakers. The deficiency of data on poaching in the public domain also hampered scientific research on poaching. The lack of a scientific approach to analyze poaching creates a gap between reality and an effective solution to reduce its implications on wildlife conservation. Poaching has also been affected by fast economic development in India and the region, which has given rise to increased demand of wildlife. Protected areas, created to conserve wildlife, face pressure from poaching and demographic growth. Economic developments affect poaching and demographic changes and affect conservation.Analyzing this trend at the country and the global level can help predict future scenarios and develop effective strategies to reduce loss to biodiversity.We examined stakeholders' perspectives on wildlife policy development in India(Part 1) and analyzed poaching and other emerging threats to 3 different protected areas in India (Part 2). This analysis is based on the perceptions of the village communities living inside and on the fringe of the protected areas. We also conducted a temporal and spatial analysis of poaching in India from 1992-2006 (Part 3). This period sees the transformation of Indian economy following an economic liberalization process, which increased the development process. Finally, we analyzed the relationship between growth in the economy and wildlife conservation in India from a historical and statistical perspective(Part 4). This part also develops system feedback loop diagrams to determine possible10relationships between variables that are connected to conservation. The relationships are then assessed at the global level to understand the impact of economic growth on wildlife conservation and understand how it influences the endangered mammals and birds.
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Ramos, Seafha C. "Hlkelonah Ue Meygeytohl: Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Wildlife Conservation and an Interdisciplinary Approach to Culturally Sensitive Research with the Yurok Tribe." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/613237.

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The term Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) is generally interpreted as the knowledge held by Indigenous communities about their environment and the cultural frameworks in which such knowledge is transmitted. There is no universally accepted definition of TEK and interpretations can vary between Western and Indigenous lenses. TEK as an academic field has gained a vast literature base; however, there is a dearth of literature in the wildlife field that expresses TEK through an Indigenous lens. There has been growing attention on TEK in the wildlife profession, warranting further exploration of how Indigenous and Western scientific paradigms may be used together in natural resources conservation. Herein, I present my doctoral research, where I focused on a culturally sensitive approach in the pursuit of TEK studies. I conducted interdisciplinary research with the Yurok Tribe of northwestern California in two parts: (1) a human dimensions study where I interviewed Yurok people regarding TEK and their relationship with wildlife and (2) a wildlife survey on Yurok ancestral lands where I used genetic analyses of scats as a noninvasive method for determining species presence and diet. In addition, I developed a synthesis document regarding historical aspects of Indian Country in the United States and philosophical contexts of TEK as science to facilitate dialogue regarding cultural sensitivity in wildlife research with a TEK component. During an internship with the National Park Service (NPS), I developed a guidance document to provide resources regarding TEK in wildlife conservation and a case study detailing how I navigated my doctoral research. My dissertation consists of five manuscripts, each formatted for a specific journal or the NPS.
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Schwarz, Lisa Kimberley. "Survival rate estimates of Florida manatees (Trichechus manatus latirostris) using carcass recovery data." Diss., Montana State University, 2007. http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2007/schwarz/SchwarzL1207.pdf.

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Karanth, Krithi K. "Mammal Diversity, Persistence, and Conservation in India." Diss., 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10161/885.

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Biodiversity conservation issues are complex and contentious. In this dissertation, I focus on Indian mammal conservation science, management, as well as policy issues that shape these factors. I am particularly interested in, where and which mammals are extinction prone, and what factors promote species persistence in human-dominated landscapes. I examine patterns of extinction, range contraction and current distribution of 25 species of large mammals in India in Chapters 2 and 3. I apply occupancy models to data from a sub-continental scale expert opinion survey. I model species occurrence in relation to ecological and social covariates based on a priori hypotheses about the determinants of mammalian distribution patterns.

I find that all 25 large mammal species are extinction prone. I find time affects extinction, and conservation initiatives of the last four decades have allowed some species to re-colonize some areas. I find protected wildlife reserves are critically important for persistence of species. Many species with much of their habitat outside existing protected areas will require new protected areas to persist. I find that human population density negatively influences survival probability for species, and human cultural tolerance positively affected persistence of species. Most large-bodied animals, habitat specialists, and rare species had higher extinction probabilities. I find that in addition to protected areas, land use, and human population densities, regionally rooted cultural and religious factors have allowed some species to survive. Conservation strategies must integrate all these factors to ensure the survival of India's large mammals in the future.

Conservation efforts to protect wildlife in human-dominated landscapes, often requires relocation of people. This policy has rarely been examined in detail. In Chapter 4, I focus on a reserve in India's Western Ghats of India to assess resettlement experiences of people during and after implementation of a relocation project.

Lastly, the success or failure of conservation policies and management interventions be they for protecting wildlife or addressing needs of local communities, depends substantially on the attitudes of conservation practitioners. In Chapter 5, I examine the attitudes, perspectives and opinions of Indian conservationists towards conservation issues and policies in India.


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Neelakantan, Amrita. "Moving people for tigers: Resettlement, Food Security and Landscape-Level Conservation in Central India." Thesis, 2019. https://doi.org/10.7916/D87H32GM.

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Resettlement of humans from protected areas conserves habitats for wildlife. However, impacts of resettlement on the well-being of resettled communities and on broader conservation goals at the landscape level have been poorly quantified until now due to inadequate documentation and baseline information. Recent documentation and advances in measurements of human well-being enable studies that examine the impacts of resettlement for both people and conservation. In India, the current standardized resettlement policy by the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) is explicit in its goal to create inviolate habitats for tigers within protected areas. More than 70% of the global tiger population lives in protected areas in India. The central Indian national parks hold approximately 40% of Indian tiger populations. Implementation of the NTCA policy provides an opportunity to study resettlement with relatively accurate records of where resettled households moved, a standardized monetary compensation and the potential for replication with large representative groups to study impacts in various landscapes across the country. This dissertation focuses on resettlement in Kanha National Park in central India, one of the most well-known and oldest tiger reserves in the country. The Kanha National Park (KNP) landscape mirrors the realities of many people-park interactions in human-dominated areas with high percentages of indigenous human populations, historical forced displacements, and current resettlements that follow a standardized national policy. From a conservation point of view, connectivity between KNP and other protected areas across central India is crucial for genetically healthy tiger populations. This dissertation consists of three analyses that combine data from field surveys and existing data sources to examine the impacts of resettlement on food security, landscape connectivity for wildlife, and human-wildlife conflict in the KNP landscape. In Chapter 1, I use household surveys to compare the food security and livelihood associations of resettled households compared to their non-resettled neighbors at new settlement locations. I show that resettled households have similar availability and access to foods as their non-resettled neighbors. Increases in off-farm income sources are associated with higher food access for all households. In Chapter 2, I explore the pattern of low food access in the KNP landscape using the five capitals model for sustainable development to illustrate significant associations between livelihood factors and household food access. Salaried stable incomes and kitchen garden diversity are significantly associated with higher food access. Financial capital dwarfs the contributions of social and natural capitals which have supplementary roles in times of financial stress. In Chapter 3, I address resettlement impacts on habitat connectivity between protected areas and human-wildlife conflict that resettled households face after relocating outside the park. Resettled households are not disproportionately moving into corridors between protected areas, especially when compared to the manifold more non-resettled households already residing in these areas. Resettled households however are moving into areas of high human-wildlife conflict due to their continued proximity to KNP. Outcomes from Chapter 3 also confirm that steady incomes can alleviate forest use and lower human activities in forests reducing human-wildlife conflict. In human-dominated landscapes such as KNP, financial capital and the stability of household incomes can aid both food security, lower pressures on non-protected forests and potentially lower human-wildlife conflict. The results counter assumptions that resettled communities continue to follow traditional natural resource reliant livelihoods. Local populations are not likely to engage in livelihoods that are heavily reliant on natural resources as rural populations become integrated into urban economies. The results from this dissertation imply that managers in the KNP landscape can alleviate food security and aid landscape wide conservation goals by increasing off-farm salaried incomes. Finally, in India, there is a high potential for replication of this study around other protected areas, with nationally standardized resettlement in landscapes that vary geographically, ecologically and socially.
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Matthews, Sean Michael. "Fisher population ecology on the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation, northwestern California." 2012. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3518259.

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I studied aspects of fisher (Martes pennanti) population ecology on the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation in northern California to fill critical information gaps relative to timber management and its effect on the status of fishers, a candidate for listing under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. A decline in mark-resight density estimates of fishers from 1998 (52/100 km2; 95% CI = 43–64) to 2005 (14/100 km2; 13–16) was likely due to changes in prey habitat suitability, increased predation pressure, and/or disease. The decline was also indicated by catch-per-unit effort indices, but not by camera station or track-plate station indices. Colleagues and I developed and tested methods of collecting mark-recapture data using genetic marking, passive integrated transponder (PIT) tag technology, and digital, passive-infrared photography that could be used in a demographic monitoring protocol. The comparatively high cost of PIT tag reading equipment and genetic analyses makes the use these methods dramatically more expensive and yield less demographic data compared to using a traditional mark-recapture approach using only live trapping. By monitoring 40 radio-marked, breeding age (≥ 2 years old) females during 2005–2011, we found that 87% exhibited denning behavior and 65% of these were successful in weaning at least one kit (mean = 1.9). Of 14 kits radio-marked in their first fall, 3 died prior to dispersal, 3 lost collars, and the other 8 established home ranges 0.8–18.0 km away from natal areas. Nipple size (width multiplied by height of the largest anterior nipple), evaluated as a predictive index of female fisher reproductive success, differed among nonbreeders vs. attempted and current breeders. A predictive index for use in assigning reproductive status to females with unknown reproductive histories had an overall correct classification rate of 81% and a chance-corrected measure of prediction of 69.5%. These results illustrate the value in establishing long-term, accurate programs to monitor populations of imperiled species which strive to determine cause and affect relationships to changes in populations and ultimately, modeling habitat fitness. The relatively low reproductive rate of female fishers brings into question the species ability to demographically respond to increased rates of juvenile and adult mortality with increased reproduction and/or survival. The limited dispersal capability of juvenile fishers restricts ability to rescue vanishing local populations from extirpation, re-inhabit landscapes from which they were previously extirpated, and establish the functional connectivity of metapopulations.
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Von, Brandis Rainer Georg. "The ecology of foraging hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) at D'Arros Island and St. Joseph Atoll in the Seychelles, Western Indian Ocean." Thesis, 2010. http://encore.tut.ac.za/iii/cpro/DigitalItemViewPage.external?sp=1000490.

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Thesis (DTech. degree in Nature Conservation.)--Tshwane University of Technology, 2010.
Hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) have been reduced by more than 80% worldwide in the last century and are considered critically endangered. Although nesting populations have been subject to numerous studies, there is a considerable lack of knowledge pertaining to the in-water behaviour and ecological functions of wild foraging hawksbill populations. This is especially true for the Western Indian Ocean as important topics such as habitat use and dietary items have scarcely been explored. Between 2006 and present, more than 178 hours of in-water observations of foraging hawksbill activity was recorded on a small insular reef at D'Arros Island, Seychelles. Most of the 827 sightings were of known, resident turtles (> 90%), facilitating analyses on both a population and individual level. Habitat types were identified and described, turtle densities estimated, population dynamics established, home ranges calculated, food items identified, food intake quantified, feeding behavior described, food resources quantified, diet selectivity indices calculated, intra/interspecific competition quantified and activity and dive patterns were described.
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Books on the topic "Wildlife conservation, india"

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Agrawal, K. C. Wildlife of India: Conservation and management. Bikader: Nidhi, 2000.

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1945-, Sharma B. D., and Tej Kumari, eds. Wildlife & diseasein [sic] India. Delhi: Asiatic Pub. House, 1998.

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Desai, J. H. Zoos of India. New Delhi: Central Zoo Authority, 2004.

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U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Division of International Conservation, ed. Spirit of cooperation: Wildlife Without Borders--India. Arlington, VA: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Division of International Conservation, 2001.

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1961-, Kothari Ashish, Singh Neena 1966-, Suri Saloni 1969-, and Workshop on Exploring the Possibilities of Joint Management of Protected Areas in India (1994 : New Delhi, India), eds. People and protected areas: Towards participatory conservation in India. New Delhi: Sage Publications, 1996.

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Sridhar, Aarthi. Sea turtle conservation and fisheries in Orissa, India. Chennai: International Collective in Support of Fishworkers, 2005.

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Ghosh, Nirmal. The jungle life of India. New Delhi: Lustre Press, 1990.

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Rodgers, W. A. Wildlife protected area network in India: A review, executive summary. Dehradun: Wildlife Institute of India, 2002.

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Nehru Memorial Museum and Library. Centre for Contemporary Studies., ed. Troubled legacy: A brief history of wildlife preservation in India. New Delhi: Centre for Contemporary Studies, Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, 1998.

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Valmik, Thapar, ed. Battling for survival: India's wilderness over two centuries. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "Wildlife conservation, india"

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Van Schendel, Willem. "Commons and Wildlife Conservation." In The Routledge Companion to Northeast India, 73–80. London: Routledge India, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003285540-12.

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Sharma, B. K., B. S. Nathawat, Shailja Sharma, and Seema Kulshreshtha. "Wildlife Conservation in Rajasthan: The Legal Framework Versus the Wildlife Trade." In Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India, 401–29. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01345-9_19.

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Ahmad, Khursheed. "Conservation of Pheasants in Jammu and Kashmir." In Case Studies of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation in India, 199–207. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003321422-20.

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Mir, Zaffar Rais, Athar Noor, Riyaz Ahmad, Khursheed Ahmad, Intesar Suhail, Bilal Habib, Shahid Ahmad Dar, et al. "Distribution and Conservation of Kashmir Gray Langur." In Case Studies of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation in India, 220–28. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003321422-22.

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Nailwal, Poornima, Subhechha Tapaswini, and Anil Kumar. "Indian Robin." In Case Studies of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation in India, 101–10. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003321422-10.

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Pandey, Naveen, Mordecai Panmei, Jadumoni Goswami, Sumanta Kundu, Dibyajyoti Saikia, Sharad Kumar, and Kedar Gore. "Web of Socioeconomic Considerations for Nature Conservation in Manipur." In Case Studies of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation in India, 266–75. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003321422-25.

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Ilyas, Orus, and Junaid Nazeer Shah. "Impact of Grazing on Bird Community in Binsar Wildlife Sanctuary." In Case Studies of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation in India, 165–76. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003321422-16.

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Sasi, Ramoorthy, and Honnavalli N. Kumara. "Conservation Status of Large Mammals in Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary, Western Ghats, India." In Indian Hotspots, 287–96. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-6983-3_16.

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Hussain, Mohd Mukhtyar, Orus Ilyas, and Ekwal Imam. "Wetland Inventory of Aligarh District." In Case Studies of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation in India, 250–65. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003321422-24.

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Ahmed, Kaleem, Mohd Qasim, Abdul Hamid Malik, and Ali Asghar Shah. "Avifaunal Diversity at Baba Ghulam Shah Badshah University Campus." In Case Studies of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation in India, 208–19. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003321422-21.

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Conference papers on the topic "Wildlife conservation, india"

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Kshitiz, Sonu Shreshtha, Ramy Mounir, Mayank Vatsa, Richa Singh, Saket Anand, Sudeep Sarkar, and Sevaram Mali Parihar. "Long-term Monitoring of Bird Flocks in the Wild." In Thirty-Second International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-23}. California: International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2023/704.

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Abstract:
Monitoring and analysis of wildlife are key to conservation planning and conflict management. The widespread use of camera traps coupled with AI-based analysis tools serves as an excellent example of successful and non-invasive use of technology for design, planning, and evaluation of conservation policies. As opposed to the typical use of camera traps that capture still images or short videos, in this project, we propose to analyze longer term videos monitoring a large flock of birds. This project, which is part of the NSF-TIH Indo-US joint R&D partnership, focuses on solving challenges associated with the analysis of long-term videos captured at feeding grounds and nesting sites, among other such locations that host large flocks of migratory birds. We foresee that the objectives of this project would lead to datasets and benchmarking tools as well as novel algorithms that would be instrumental in developing automated video analysis tools that could in turn help understand individual and social behavior of birds. The first of the key outcomes of this research will include the curation of challenging, real-world datasets for benchmarking various image and video analytics algorithms for tasks such as counting, detection, segmentation, and tracking. Our recent efforts towards this outcome is a curated dataset of 812 high-resolution, point-annotated, images (4K - 32MP) of a flock of Demoiselle cranes (Anthropoides virgo) taken from their feeding site at Khichan, Rajasthan, India. The average number of birds in each image is about 207, with a maximum count of 1500. The benchmark experiments show that state-of-the-art vision techniques struggle with tasks such as segmentation, detection, localization, and density estimation for the proposed dataset. Over the execution of this open science research, we will be scaling this dataset for segmentation and tracking in videos, as well as developing novel techniques for video analytics for wildlife monitoring.
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