ABSTRACT

Wildlife tend our forests — they pollinate flowers, disperse seeds, eat insects that harm trees, and keep herbivores and diseases in check. They keep our forests healthy and resilient — ready and able to face and counter any challenges, such as global warming and climate change. They are the individual cogs that keep the forest machine functioning. And we desperately need our forests — to sequester carbon, to purify our air and water, to protect our soils from getting eroded, and to save our dams and waterways. Wildlife do need our care, concern, and attention, but we also need our wildlife — perhaps much more sincerely. A majority of wildlife arrived on this planet much before humans, and the Earth belongs to them as well.

So how do we conserve wildlife? This is the question that Principles of Wildlife Conservation seeks to answer. It presents a lucid — cogent, yet simple — narration about the why’s and how’s of conserving wildlife. It begins with the first principles — and thus requires no prerequisite other than an urge to seek knowledge. It is full of pictures and case studies from the field — to facilitate easy grasping of the subject. The book builds a solid foundation of the theory of wildlife conservation, and tops that up with experiences from actually doing wildlife conservation. In this way, it equips the reader to master both the science — and the art — of conserving wildlife.

chapter Chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|48 pages

Organisation of life

chapter Chapter 3|26 pages

Population growth and community organisation

chapter Chapter 4|58 pages

Threats to wildlife resources

chapter Chapter 5|54 pages

Wildlife monitoring

chapter Chapter 6|18 pages

Wildlife disease management

chapter Chapter 7|46 pages

Animal restraint and immobilisation

chapter Chapter 8|28 pages

Wildlife genetics

chapter Chapter 9|28 pages

Habitat management

chapter Chapter 10|38 pages

Ex-situ and in-situ conservation

chapter Chapter 11|14 pages

Emerging aspects of wildlife management