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Beyond Numbers

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s recent chairing of the National Board for Wildlife (NBWL) meeting at Gir National Park coincided with World Wildlife Day and underscored India’s commitment to wildlife conservation. The expansion of the Cheetah reintroduction initiative, the release of India’s first-ever riverine dolphin census, and the Rs 2,900 crore allocation for Project Lion are commendable steps. However, the real challenge lies not just in increasing wildlife populations but in managing human-animal conflicts that inevitably follow conservation successes.

India’s wildlife policies have long been measured by the rising numbers of endangered species, but the carrying capacity of habitats remains poorly understood. The Gir National Park, home to Asiatic lions, exemplifies this dilemma. Once reduced to fewer than 20 individuals, lion numbers now exceed 670, with over 300 roaming outside protected areas. While conservationists celebrate this recovery, the reality is grimmer—lions increasingly venture into villages, roads, and even beaches, leading to fatal encounters with humans, livestock killings, and tragic accidents involving trains.

A similar pattern is visible in elephant and tiger habitats, where deforestation and infrastructure projects push animals beyond their traditional ranges, increasing human-wildlife conflicts. In response, the NBWL meeting proposed the use of artificial intelligence to mitigate such conflicts, but technology alone cannot substitute for habitat management and translocation policies. The Gujarat government’s refusal to relocate lions outside the state, despite scientific recommendations, is an example of conservation being dictated by regional pride rather than ecological necessity.

The riverine dolphin census, which estimated 6,327 individuals, is a step towards better conservation planning. However, protecting these dolphins requires tackling threats like river pollution, sand mining, and dam construction—issues that remain inadequately addressed in conservation policies. Similarly, the establishment of the International Big Cats Alliance highlights India’s ambition in global wildlife leadership, but it must first resolve its domestic conservation contradictions.

While PM Modi rightly emphasized community participation, the state’s approach to coexistence remains flawed. Local communities, often the first to bear the brunt of conservation policies, must be provided with sustainable alternatives, adequate compensation for livestock losses, and decision-making roles in conservation planning.

India’s wildlife conservation success must not be measured solely by population figures. True conservation demands a holistic approach—one that balances species recovery with habitat expansion, scientific planning with political will, and technology with community-led initiatives. Otherwise, we risk turning our conservation triumphs into new crises, where neither humans nor animals truly thrive.

 

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