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Human-Wildlife Conflict


Affiliations
1 National Agricultural Science Fund, Indian Council of Agricultural Research, New Delhi 110 012, India
2 National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bengaluru 560 012, India
3 National Bureau of Agricultural Insect Resources, Bengaluru 560 024, India
4 GPS Institute of Agricultural Management, Bengaluru 560 058, India
 

Human-wildlife conflict (HWC) is on the rise globally, and is one of the significant environmental problems in India. In India, HWC manifests itself in several ways, such as wildlife poaching, retaliatory killing of/injury to wildlife species, crop raiding and livestock predation by wildlife species, injury to humans or human mortality, and destruction of property, houses and buildings by wildlife. Of these, wildlife conflict in agro pastoral contexts has been a subject of debate and great concern nationally, not only for its impact on the farmers, but also for the consequences regarding wildlife conflict. In India, HWC involves multiple stakeholders and multitudinous socio-cultural and environmental issues. Hence any study on this topic must encompass a multi-disciplinary effort that provides a holistic understanding of the history of wildlife, crop and livestock raiding, its nature and consequences and discuss various techniques that have been used or recommended to mitigate the effects of this crisis.
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  • Human-Wildlife Conflict

Abstract Views: 279  |  PDF Views: 101

Authors

Pawan Kumar Agrawal
National Agricultural Science Fund, Indian Council of Agricultural Research, New Delhi 110 012, India
Baldev Raj
National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bengaluru 560 012, India
Sindhu Radhakrishna
National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bengaluru 560 012, India
Abraham Verghese
National Bureau of Agricultural Insect Resources, Bengaluru 560 024, India
Kesavan Subaharan
National Bureau of Agricultural Insect Resources, Bengaluru 560 024, India
Ankita Gupta
National Bureau of Agricultural Insect Resources, Bengaluru 560 024, India
Abraham Verghese
GPS Institute of Agricultural Management, Bengaluru 560 058, India

Abstract


Human-wildlife conflict (HWC) is on the rise globally, and is one of the significant environmental problems in India. In India, HWC manifests itself in several ways, such as wildlife poaching, retaliatory killing of/injury to wildlife species, crop raiding and livestock predation by wildlife species, injury to humans or human mortality, and destruction of property, houses and buildings by wildlife. Of these, wildlife conflict in agro pastoral contexts has been a subject of debate and great concern nationally, not only for its impact on the farmers, but also for the consequences regarding wildlife conflict. In India, HWC involves multiple stakeholders and multitudinous socio-cultural and environmental issues. Hence any study on this topic must encompass a multi-disciplinary effort that provides a holistic understanding of the history of wildlife, crop and livestock raiding, its nature and consequences and discuss various techniques that have been used or recommended to mitigate the effects of this crisis.


DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv111%2Fi10%2F1581-1582