Aniruddha V. Belsare

Standardization of Procedures Required for Dealing with Wildlife Emergencies by Training Veterinarians and Forest Department Personnel in States with High Human-Wildlife Conflicts in India

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
Assam
Rajasthan
Gujrat
Goa
Maharashtra
Madhya Pradesh
Himachal Pradesh

India
Conflict, Indian Sub-continent20 Jul 2005

Wildlife emergencies arising due to Human-Wildlife conflicts are on the rise in India, especially so in states like Uttaranchal, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Karnataka, Orissa, Assam etc. In most cases, the species involved in conflict are endangered and are highly protected by the Indian law. The procedures employed in response by the local Forest Department for resolving or managing the conflict varies to a large extent depending upon their experience, expertise and resources available. Most of the times the Forest Department has to rely on Veterinarians with little or no knowledge of wild animals since the present day veterinary curriculum does not emphasize on the wild species, many of whom are endangered.

I hope to initiate the process of standardization of the procedures involved in dealing with Wildlife Emergencies viz. Capture/ rescue considerations, Remote Drug Delivery, Chemical Restraint, post capture management, treatment, Data collection, etc. by training programmes for Veterinarians and Veterinary students (final year) and Forest department personnel in the states with high conflicts.

For more information contact:  anyadoc@gmail.com

Project Update: December 2005

•Institutional support provided by the Wildlife Protection Society of India.

•Correspondence with Chief Wildlife Wardens of following states: Assam, Gujarat, Goa, Himachal Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Orissa, Rajasthan and Uttaranchal.

•Positive response from Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttaranchal and Himachal Pradesh.

•First workshop at Forest Guard Training School, Jalna, Maharashtra on 27th July 2005. The participants were mostly forest guards from various parts of Maharashtra (42), local Livestock Development Officer and a pre-veterinary student .The objective of this workshop was to sensitize the frontline staff of the Forest Department with regards to the various procedures employed in dealing with Wildlife emergencies. Vidya Athreya, Wildlife Biologist and Aniruddha Belsare were the resource persons for this workshop.

•Follow up with the states that had responded positively to the initial correspondence.

•The second workshop was conducted at the State Forest Research Institute, Jabalpur in Madhya Pradesh on 22nd Oct 2005. The participants (30) included the Conservator of Forests, Jabalpur, DFO Jabalpur, DFO Dindori, Assistant Conservator of Forests and Range Forest Officers. A Professor from the regional Veterinary College and a representative from a NGO actively involved in Wildlife rescue were also present. Ashok Captain (Taxonomist), Advait Edgaonkar (Wildlife Researcher), Belinda Wright (Executive Director, Wildlife Protection Society of India) and Aniruddha Belsare were the resource persons. A set of Blowpipe and accessories and a Jab stick was presented to the Forest Department.

•The third workshop is scheduled at Wynad, Kerala on 28th December 2005. Though Kerala is not in the original list, the Forest Department requested an urgent workshop due to rise in the human–wildlife conflicts, (especially Elephants) in the region.

Porject Update: June 2006

A total of 8 workshops have been conducted so far in 6 states viz.

Maharashtra, Madhyapradesh, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Uttaranchal and Goa. The top officers (PCCF-WL, CCF-WL) participated in the proceedings of the workshop in Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Goa. The interactive sessions have been very interesting in all the workshops and interesting experiences were shared.

Final Report

Read about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final report below.

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Detailed Final Report51 KB
SCB Conference 2007

With support from the RSGF, Aniruddha attended the SCB Conference 2007 and presented the poster below.

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Final Report56.94 KB
Poster151.11 KB

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