wildlife conservation – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Tue, 02 Jun 2026 20:46:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png wildlife conservation – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Tigress Zeenat gives birth to four cubs in Similipal https://artifex.news/article71052567-ecerand29/ Tue, 02 Jun 2026 20:46:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article71052567-ecerand29/ Read More “Tigress Zeenat gives birth to four cubs in Similipal” »

]]>

Zeenat with one of her cubs in Odisha’s Similipal Tiger Reserve.

The translocation effort aimed at enhancing the genetic diversity of tigers in Odisha’s Similipal Tiger Reserve has received a major boost, with tigress Zeenat, brought from Maharashtra, giving birth to four cubs. Photographs of Zeenat gently carrying her cubs in her mouth within the reserve have since gone viral.

“Today, a proud chapter has been added to Odisha’s natural resources and wildlife conservation efforts. Tigress Zeenat, relocated from Maharashtra’s Tadoba-Andhari Tiger Reserve, has given birth to four cubs in the conducive environment of Similipal,” Chief Minister Mohan Majhi announced on X on Tuesday (June 2, 2026).

“This success not only signifies an increase in the tiger population in the State but also stands as an excellent testament to our administrative foresight in protecting biodiversity and creating a safe and robust habitat for wildlife,” said Mr. Majhi.

Odisha Chief Minister further said, “Special measures have been taken by the Forest Department to ensure the safety of the mother and cubs, and their movements are being continuously monitored. Thanks to the dedicated vigil and effective conservation policies of our forest staff, Odisha has today established itself as a secure sanctuary for wildlife.”

“Our government remains fully committed to preserving the ecological balance of Similipal intact and strengthening the State’s wildlife conservation initiatives in the days ahead,” he asserted.

After her translocation from Maharashtra in 2025, Zeenat had a troubled phase last year. Following 10 days of acclimatisation in the core area of Similipal, the tigress, while attempting to establish her territory, strayed into Jharkhand and then West Bengal in the first week of December, putting the forest departments of Odisha, Jharkhand and West Bengal on alert.

The tigress was tranquilised and captured in West Bengal on December 29, 2025. After a medical examination, the tigress was brought back to Similipal on the directions of the National Tiger Conservation Authority. Subsequently, a special enclosure was created in southern Similipal, while forest department officials kept a strict vigil on Zeenat.

A sizeable number of tigers in Similipal displays pseudo-melanism, characterised by black stripes much more pronounced than the typical colouration of a Royal Bengal Tiger. It is largely due to the result of inbreeding. Under NTCA supervision, Zeenat and another tiger, Jamuna, were released into the Similipal to improve genetic diversity.

According to the Similipal Tiger Reserve authorities, Zeenat was released into a soft enclosure created for Jamuna in the southern division. The southern part covers a major portion of Simlipal’s core area and has denser forest cover and no anthropogenic pressure. The tigress would remain under observation, and in the process, she would continue acclimatising before being released into the wild, the authorities said.

The Odisha government had earlier planned to bring six pairs of tigers from other States to Similipal. Zeenat giving birth to four cubs assumes significant importance for the State Forest department, especially after an earlier experiment to introduce tigers in Satkosia Tiger Reserve had failed. A tiger brought from Madhya Pradesh and released into Satkosia died after falling into a poacher’s trap, while another was sent back to Madhya Pradesh after facing hostility from people within Satkosia Reserve Forest.



Source link

]]>
India’s first satellite-tagged Ganges soft-shell turtle released in Kaziranga https://artifex.news/article70982975-ece/ Fri, 15 May 2026 12:28:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70982975-ece/ Read More “India’s first satellite-tagged Ganges soft-shell turtle released in Kaziranga” »

]]>

In a first in India, a satellite-tagged Ganges soft-shell turtle was released in the Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve on the occasion of Endangered Species Day on Friday, May 15, 2026.
| Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

India’s first satellite-tagged Ganges soft-shell turtle, an endangered species, was released in the 1,302 sq. km Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve in Assam on Friday (May 15, 2026).

The release of the freshwater reptile coincided with the observation of Endangered Species Day.

Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma termed the event a major step for wildlife conservation and a proud moment for the State, “as we continue to protect every species that calls our forests home”.

Assam is one of the world’s top priority areas in freshwater turtle conservation. Of the eight soft-shell turtles reported from India, five are known from the Kaziranga landscape.

The Ganges soft-shell turtle (Nilssonia gangetica), a Schedule I animal under the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972, can be differentiated from other riverine turtles by its distinct arrowhead-shaped markings on the top of the head. In India, the species inhabits large rivers, lakes, and reservoirs.

Recorded as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List, this large turtle is a major river predator and helps clean up the system by feeding on dead and decaying animal matter.

Identifying critical habits

“Understanding seasonal movement patterns, home range, and identifying critical habits like nesting and breeding will help in active management of soft-shell in the Brahmaputra river basin,” Abhijit Das, a senior scientist at the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), said.

He led a team under the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change in the satellite-tagging exercise in collaboration with the Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve authorities and the Assam Forest Department. The National Geographic Society funded the project.

Forest officials said a healthy adult turtle was captured, fitted with the transmitter under veterinary supervision, and released back into its natural habitat along the northern bank of the Brahmaputra.



Source link

]]>
Craig the elephant, and the promise and problem of wildlife icons https://artifex.news/article70674826-ece/ Thu, 26 Feb 2026 01:15:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70674826-ece/ Read More “Craig the elephant, and the promise and problem of wildlife icons” »

]]>

Early this year, when Craig, one of Africa’s “super tusker” elephants, died in Kenya’s Amboseli National Park, tributes poured in from across the world. Photographs of his very large ivory tusks, nearly brushing the ground as he walked with Mount Kilimanjaro in the background, resurfaced online. Tourists shared memories of sightings and safari guides recalled their encounters with the regal tusker, who was known for his patient, calm demeanour.

Also Read | Reteti Elephant Sanctuary | Rewilding in Kenya

Craig was not just an elephant. He had become a global symbol of wilderness, survival, tourism, and wildlife conservation.

An elephant with tusks that size is extraordinarily rare today. Decades of ivory poaching have selectively removed individuals with large tusks, leaving behind animals with less ivory. Craig therefore represented a genetic lineage that is rapidly disappearing. But he was also something else: a source of livelihood for many. Safaris, lodges, photographers, and local communities all benefited from the tourists he attracted. People travelled across continents hoping for a glimpse of him.

Yet his story also reveals something people often overlook. While individual animals can inspire love and attention, conservation itself does not operate at the level of individuals. It operates at the level of populations, habitats, and ecosystems.

Power of a name

Craig’s fame began with something simple: his name. Born into a closely observed herd studied for decades by biologist Cynthia Moss, he grew up in the public eye.

Naming wild animals transforms them from anonymous members of a species into characters in a story. Once an animal has a name, people follow its life, celebrate its milestones, and mourn its death. They return to a landscape hoping to see a familiar face again. Over time, public affection for an individual can, conservationists hope, grow into curiosity about the species and the ecosystem it inhabits.

Zoos have long understood this connection. ‘Star’ animals anchor public attention, drive visitor numbers, and help raise funds for conservation and education. A recent example is Pesto, the king penguin chick at the Sea Life Aquarium in Melbourne, Australia, whose extraordinary size made him a viral sensation. His popularity translated into a significant boost in visits, reportedly increasing visitor footfall by more than 30%. Other national parks and protected areas have also adopted the same paradigm through tourism, documentaries, and social media.

The practice of naming wild individuals became popular in the 1960s, when the noted primatologists Jane Goodall and Dian Fossey broke from scientific convention by naming chimpanzees and gorillas instead of assigning them numbers. David Greybeard, the chimpanzee who became famous worldwide after Goodall observed him using tools, is remembered as an individual, identifiable by the grey facial hair that gave him a characteristically wise appearance.

Similarly, Digit, a young gorilla with a missing finger, became known after appearing alongside Fossey in photographs. Naming created memory, memory created narrative, narrative created empathy. Even then, however, the science of conservation has remained firmly focused on populations.

Elephants at Amboseli National Park with Mt Kilimanjaro in the background, 2012.

Elephants at Amboseli National Park with Mt Kilimanjaro in the background, 2012.
| Photo Credit:
Amoghavarsha JS (CC BY-SA)

Icons of tourism

India, too, has had its own version of Craig. Machli, the famed tigress of Ranthambore, became one of the most photographed tigers in the world. She appeared in documentaries, featured on magazine covers, and drew thousands of visitors to the park. Tourism associated with her reportedly generated millions of dollars over her lifetime. Her descendants continue to carry forward her legacy, still drawing tourists to Ranthambore today.

Machli was not ‘conservation’ in herself but she did not undermine it either. She coexisted with conservation goals. Her presence helped sustain tourism, which in turn supported local livelihoods and park revenues. Visitors who came to visit Machli sometimes left with a broader appreciation for forests and wildlife.

But achieving this balance has not been easy.

Wildlife tourism built around celebrity animals often expands beyond ecological limits. Resorts mushroom near park boundaries. Safari vehicles crowd sightings. Guides, who are under pressure to deliver tiger or elephant ‘encounters’, may focus narrowly on charismatic megafauna while overlooking the broader ecosystem. The wildlife biologist and conservationist Sanjay Gubbi has argued that such tourism frequently becomes a commercial enterprise rather than an educational one.

He pointed out that tiger sightings are often reduced to little more than selfie opportunities, offering visitors photographs and social media posts rather than a deeper appreciation of ecological needs.

Emotion versus ecology

The challenge lies in how the public interprets these icons of wildlife. Emotional attachment can blur the distinction between the welfare of individuals and protecting the species. In the wild, injury, starvation, and death are part of natural ecological processes. Predators may set out to hunt and return empty handed. Young animals die of disease or are killed while their elders become frail. These losses help regulate animal populations over time, ensuring they don’t exceed the resources available or the carrying capacity of the ecosystem.

Yet when a well-known animal suffers, people call for it to be saved and treated, sometimes followed by demanding its lifelong care. Such interventions can feel like a moral salve but rarely hold any conservation value. Unless a species is critically endangered, as with the great Indian bustard, where every individual truly matters, saving a single animal rarely changes the trends that matter to its  population as a whole.

In his 2014 article in The Hindu, the conservation biologist and tiger expert K. Ullas Karanth argued that focusing too much on individual animals can misdirect limited resources. The survival of a species depends on protecting its habitats, making sure it has access to sufficient prey populations, keeping its populations genetically diverse, connecting it spatially to other populations nearby, and mitigating human pressures on its survival — and not on prolonging the life of one ageing tiger.

Dedicating money and human resources to high-profile rescues, he added, could in fact come at the cost of less visible but more important work necessary to sustain populations in the wild.

Therefore, from a conservation perspective, Craig’s importance lay not in his fame but in his genes. As one of the few remaining elephants with exceptionally large tusks, he carried traits that poaching has nearly erased.

Where individuals do matter

Yet dismissing individual animals entirely would also be a mistake.

“In human-dominated landscapes, certain animals can become ambassadors for coexistence,” elephant researcher Ananda M. Kumar, of the Nature Conservation Foundation, said.

He pointed to the case of a female elephant named Singari in Tamil Nadu’s Valparai plateau. Once wary of people, she began feeding calmly near settlements as old age limited her movement. And rather than drive her away, the villagers also grew protective. When she died, they gathered to mourn her.

Such relationships do not replace conservation science but they can soften attitudes toward wildlife and reduce conflict. Emotional familiarity can make tolerance possible in places where people live alongside large animals. For social species like elephants, understanding individual personalities can also help researchers predict behaviour and manage human-elephant interactions more effectively.

In such contexts, a well-known individual wild animal can help researchers track behaviour as well as communicate more effectively with local communities.

Celebrity as liability

Perhaps the risks are most visible when famous animals are involved in human deaths.

Public opinion has been known to fracture when a well-known tiger or elephant kills a person, and often along predictable lines: the animal’s urban admirers demand that it be protected while the local communities demand that it be moved away, if not killed. Eventually the forest department is caught between emotional campaigns and the need to maintain trust with the people who share space with wildlife every day.

The case of Ranthambore’s Ustad (T-24), a large male tiger and descendant of Machli, illustrated this dilemma. After being linked to multiple human deaths in 2015, local authorities decided to remove him from the wild, only for protests to erupt and legal battles to follow. To many people outside the region, he was a beloved icon — but to the villagers, Ustad was a danger.

Scientists have warned that failing to act decisively in such cases can erode local support for conservation. Dr. Karanth also articulated this perspective in his writing, noting that in healthy tiger populations, a significant fraction of individuals die every year of natural causes, territorial conflicts or the risks associated with dispersal (including being killed in road accidents or being injured in fights over territory).

So attempting to ‘rescue’ every conflict animal may satisfy public sentiment but can undermine long-term conservation goals by alienating the people whose cooperation is essential to protect habitats. Dr. Gubbi also has, in other contexts, expressed similar concerns about how emotion-driven responses can clash with ecological realities on the ground.

What Craig stood for

Craig’s death by natural causes is, in many ways, a conservation success. He survived decades in a landscape once ravaged by poaching. Unlike other famed “super tuskers” that were killed for ivory, his life reflects the benefits of sustained protection, anti-poaching enforcement, and community involvement. He was an exception.

Celebrity animals are powerful storytellers. They capture attention in ways that statistics never can. They open emotional doors through which conservation messages can enter. But they’re not the full picture.

Conservation ultimately depends on less photogenic realities such as protecting habitats, enforcing laws, partnering with communities, securing corridors, using science-based management, and securing long-term funding — things that neither trend on social media nor inspire tributes.

Perhaps the role of iconic wildlife individuals is not conservation but to lead us towards it. Loving a single elephant or tiger is easy but translating that fascination to support for policies and commitments needed to protect entire landscapes is harder, but also more necessary.

If the global mourning for Craig remains focused on the death of one magnificent elephant, very little will have been achieved. But if it leads instead to sustained support for anti-poaching efforts, habitat protection, and saving elephant corridors, then his story will serve conservation.

Ipsita Herlekar is an independent science writer.



Source link

]]>
In Focus Podcast | Naming chimps, making room: Jane Goodall’s wild legacy for women in science https://artifex.news/article70125089-ece/ Sat, 04 Oct 2025 13:21:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70125089-ece/ Read More “In Focus Podcast | Naming chimps, making room: Jane Goodall’s wild legacy for women in science” »

]]>

On a July morning in 1960, Jane Goodall stepped off a boat onto the shores of Lake Tanganyika in Tanzania. She was 26, untrained by universities, armed only with binoculars, a notebook and patience. What she saw in the forests of Gombe in East Africa altered science itself: chimpanzees who shaped tools, who mourned, who loved. She gave them names and with that simple act, insisted on their individuality.

But Goodall did more than open a window into the lives of chimpanzees. She opened doors for women. In an era when female scientists were almost absent, she, alongside gorilla researcher Dian Fossey and orangutan expert Biruté Galdikas, staked a claim in a field dominated by men. Reluctant at first, passionate in time, she traded the intimacy of the forest for activism on world stages, becoming a gentle but firm voice for nature and for children who would inherit it.

On Wednesday (October 1, 2025), Jane Goodall died at 91. She was still on tour, still speaking for the wild. Will we carry her hope and continue the path she opened for women in science?

In this weekender episode, we talk about how Goodall’s life reshaped research, storytelling and the role of women in conservation.

Guests: Catherine Crockford, primatologist at the French National Centre for Scientific Research, Lyon; Neha Sinha, wildlife biologist, conservationist, and author, based in Delhi

Host: Anupama Chandrasekaran

Produced and edited by Jude Francis Weston

For more episodes of In Focus:



Source link

]]>
Nursing Officer And Snake Rescuer Inspires Many On Social Media https://artifex.news/ajita-pandey-nursing-officer-and-snake-rescuer-inspires-many-on-social-media-7071704rand29/ Thu, 21 Nov 2024 11:01:45 +0000 https://artifex.news/ajita-pandey-nursing-officer-and-snake-rescuer-inspires-many-on-social-media-7071704rand29/ Read More “Nursing Officer And Snake Rescuer Inspires Many On Social Media” »

]]>


Ajita Pandey, a resident of Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh, has earned the nicknames “Snake Girl” and “Snake Rescuer” on social media for her daring snake rescues. She has safely returned thousands of snakes to the wild after saving them over the last few years. Her dangerous rescue videos have gone viral and garnered a lot of attention.

The first time Ajita became fascinated with snakes was when snake charmers came to her house. Through books, newspapers, and internet resources, she educated herself and discovered that while some snakes are poisonous, most are not, according to local media reports. Inspired to stop needless snake kills, she now dedicates her life to raising awareness of the ecological significance of snakes.

Watch: Chhattisgarh Woman Bravely Rescues Snake Hiding In Office With Bare Hands

Ajita achieved the World Record for rescuing the most snakes during the COVID-19 pandemic. Between March 2017 and July 2021, she rescued 984 snakes and released them in forests with the support of the local forest department.

Watch video here: 

Alongside her training in nursing and wildlife conservation, she continues to advocate for calling experts instead of harming snakes when they are spotted.

Ms Pandey, a resident of Bilaspur, is a dedicated nursing officer, a passionate snake rescuer, and a committed animal lover. To share her work with a wider audience, she maintains an Instagram page, @invincible._ajita, where she regularly posts thrilling animal rescue videos.






Source link

]]>