Wildlife Crime Prevention Assistance in Karnataka
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Karnataka boasts a rich biodiversity and is home to the country’s second-largest population of tigers... Read More
Strengthening cross border wildlife crime prevention and law enforcement between India and Nepal
India shares international borders with Pakistan, Nepal, China, Bhutan, Myanmar, Afghanistan and Bangladesh, thus significantly... Read More
Bandhavgarh Conflict Mitigation
After an MOU was signed between the Forests Department, Government of Madhya Pradesh, and Wildlife... Read More
Odisha HWC Mitigation Training
Recent surge in human wildlife conflict cases in Odisha, an eastern state of India led... Read More
Hostile Activity Watch Kernel
Hostile Activity Watch Kernel (HAWK) is Cloud Based Information Management System designed to manage interlinked databases of wildlife crime, wildlife criminals, and wildlife mortality, and help officials analyse the information and develop actionable intelligence to prevent wildlife crimes. and curb Illegal Wildlife Trade (IWT).
RIGHT OF PASSAGE: NATIONAL ELEPHANT CORRIDORS PROJECT
An umbrella project by WTI to secure a future for wild elephants by protecting and securing elephant corridors, while simultaneously rehabilitating people affected by conflict in corridor areas.
KASHMIR MARKHOR RECOVERY PROJECT
Wildlife Trust of India’s The Kashmir Markhor Recovery Project aims at improving the population status of the once thought to be-extinct species, the Pirpanjal Markhor (Capra falconeri) in Jammu and Kashmir
Protecting tigers, people and their vital habitats in the Sundarbans Delta of India and Bangladesh
The Sundarbans Delta falls in the state of West Bengal in eastern India and spreads over to Southwest Bangladesh.
GANDAK GHARIAL RECOVERY PROJECT
The Gandak Gharial Recovery Project aims to recover the population and increase the occupancy of... Read More
AMPHIBIAN RECOVERY PROJECT
Amphibians have overtaken reptiles as the most threatened taxa in the IUCN Red List of species with an unmitigated decline through the past decades.
RECOVERING WHITE-WINGED DUCK IN ASSAM & ARUNACHAL PRADESH
White-winged duck Asarcornis scutulata (or White-winged wood duck), also known as “Deo hanh” in Assamese, was once widely distributed in north-east India and south-east Asia.
Centre for Bear Rehabilitation and Conservation (CBRC)
The first specialised rehabilitation centre for Asiatic black bears in India, with an aim to rehabilitate displaced cubs back into the wild.