Appendices - Springer978-3-319-01345... · 2017. 8. 25. · able T1b Scheduled Fauna of Rajasthan...
Transcript of Appendices - Springer978-3-319-01345... · 2017. 8. 25. · able T1b Scheduled Fauna of Rajasthan...
469B.K. Sharma et al. (eds.), Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India: Conservation and Management of Vertebrates, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-01345-9, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2013
Table 1a CITES species of Rajasthan (Valid from 25 September 2012)
Appendix I Appendix II Appendix III
CLASS MAMMALIA Order Artiodactyla Family Cervidae Axis porcinus Family Bovidae
Antilope cervicapra Tetracerus
quadricornis Family Canidae (Bush dog, Foxes, Wolves) Canis lupus Cuon alpinus Canis aureus
Vulpes bengalensis V. vulpes
Family Felidae (Cats) Caracal caracal Panthera pardus Panthera tigris Prionailurus bengalensis
bengalensis Prionailurus rubiginosus
Felis chaus Felis silvestris
Family Herpestidae (Mongooses ) Herpestes edwardsii Herpestes smithii
Family Ursidae (Bears , Pandas) Melursus ursinus Family Viveridae
Paradoxurus hermaphrodi
Viverricula indica
Appendix 1: Threatened Animals of Rajasthan
Appendices
(continued)
470 Appendices
Appendix I Appendix II Appendix III
Order Cetacea Family Platanistidae
Platanista gangetica Order Chiroptera Family Pteropododae
Pteropus gigenteus Order Perrisodactyla Family Equidae Equus hemionus Khur Order Pholidata Family Manidae
Manis crassicaudata Order Primata Family Cercopithacidae Semnopithecus entellus Macaca mulata
Order Scadentia Family Tupaiidae
Anthana elliotii Tupaia belangeri Tupaia nicobarica
Class Aves Order Anseriformes Family Anatidae (Geese, Ducks, Swans)
Branta ru fi collis Oxyura leucocephala Sarkidiornis melanotos
Order Ciconiiformes Family Ciconidae (Storks)
Ciconia nigra Family Phoenicopteridae (Flamingos )
Phoenicopterus roseus Phoeniconaias minor
Family Threskiornithidae (Ibises, Spoonbills) Platalea leucorodia
(continued)
Table 1a (continued)
471Appendices
Appendix I Appendix II Appendix III
Order Falconiformes Family Acciptridae (Hawks, Eagles) Aquila heliaca Haliaeetus albicilla
Accipiter badius Accipiter gentilis Accipiter nisus Accipiter virgatus Aegypius monachus Aquila clanga Aquila nipalensis Aquila pomarina Aquila rapax Butastur teesa Buteo buteo Buteo hemilasius Buteo ru fi nus Circaetus gallicus Circus aeruginosus Circus cyaneus Circus macrourus Circus melanoleucos Circus pygargus Elanus caeruleus Gypaetus barbatus Gyps bengalensis Gyps fulvus Gyps himalayensis Gyps indicus Gyps tenuirostris Haliaeetus leucoryphus Haliastur indus Hieraaetus fasciatus Hieraaetus pennatus Ichthyophaga humilis Ichthyophaga ichthyaetus Milvus migrans Milvus milvus Neophron percnopterus Pernis ptilorhynchus Sarcogyps calvus Spilornis cheela Spizaetus cirrhatus
Family Falconidae Falco jugger Falco peregrinus
Falco cherrug Falco chicquera Falco columbarius Falco naumanni Falco severus Falco subbuteo Falco tinnunculus
(continued)
Table 1a (continued)
472 Appendices
Appendix I Appendix II Appendix III
Family Pendionidae Pandion haliaetus
Order Galliformes Family Phasianidae
Gallus sonneratii Order Gruiformes Family Gruidae Leucogeranus Anthropoides virgo
Grus antigone Grus grus
Family Otididae (Bustards) Ardeotis nigriceps Chlamydotis macqueenii Sypheotides indicus Order Passeriformes Family Estrillidae
Amandava formosa Family Pycnonotidae (Bulbul)
Pycnonotus zeylanicus Pelacaniformes Pelecanidae (Pelican) Pelecanus crispus Order Psittaciformes Family Psittacidae
Psittacula cyanocephala Psittacula eupatria
Order Strigniformes Family Tytonidae (Barn Owl)
Tyto alba Family Strigidae (Owl)
Asio fl ammeus Athene brama Bubo bubo Bubo coromandus Glaucidium radiatum Ketupa zeylonensis Ninox scutulata Otus bakkamoena Otus sunia Strix ocellata
Table 1a (continued)
(continued)
473Appendices
Appendix I Appendix II Appendix III
CLASS REPTILIA Order Crocodylia (Alligators, Caimans, Crocodiles) Family Crocodylidae Crocodylus palustris Family Gavialidae Gavialis gangeticus Order SAURIA Family Agamidae (Agamas,
Mastigures) Uromastyx hardwikkii
Family Chamaeleonidae (Chameleons ) Chamaeleon zeylanicus
Family Varanidae Varanus bengalensis Varanus griseus Order SERPENTES (Snakes) Family Boidiae (Boas)
Gongylophis conicus Eryx johnli
Family Elapidae Bungarus caeruleus B. sindanus sindanus Naja naja Naja oxiana
Family Pythonidae (Pythons) Python molurus molurus Family Viperidae
Daboia russelii Family Colubridae
Ptyas mucosa Testudines Tortoises (land-dwelling) and Turtles (aquatic forms) Family Geoemydidae (Box turtles, Freshwater turtles) Pangshura tecta Batagur kachuga Family Testudinidea (Tortoise)
Geochelone elegans Trionychidae (Softshell turtles, Terrapins) Aspideretes hurum Chitra indica A. gangeticus Lissemys punctata CLASS AMPHIBIA Ranidae(Frogs)
Euphlyctis hexadactylus Hoplobatrachus tigerinus
Source: www. cites .org/eng/resources/ species .html . (Downloaded on Nov 25, 2012)
Table 1a (continued)
474 Appendices
Table 1b Scheduled Fauna of Rajasthan as per Wildlife (Protection) Amendment Act, 2006
S. No. Scienti fi c name Common name
AvifaunaSchedule I 1. Ardeotis nigriceps Great Indian Bustard 2. Chlamydotis undulata Houbara Bustard 3. Sypheotides indica Lesser Florican 4. Platalea leucorodia Eurasian Spoonbill 5. Gyps indicus Long-billed Vulture 6. Gyps bengalensis Indian White-backed Vulture 7. Pandion haliaetus Osprey 8. Falco peregrinus Peregrine Falcon 9.10.11.12.13
Falco chicquera The whole Accipitridae familyGrus nigricolisPavo cristatusGyps tenuirostris
Red-necked FalconHawksBlack-necked StorkIndian Peafowl
Schedule II 1. Gallus sonneretii Grey Junglefowl Schedule III No Bird Schedule IV All Birds except those which
are in other schedules Schedule V 1. Corvus splendens House Crow Mammals
Schedule I 1. Antelope cervicapra Blackbuck 2. Tetracerus quadricornis Four-horned Antelope 3. Gazella bennettii Indian Gazelle (Chinkara) 4. Equus hemionus khur Asiatic Wild Ass 5. Panthera tigris Bengal Tiger 6. Caracal caracal Caracal 7. Prionailurus rubginosus Rusty-spotted Cat 8. Prionailurus viverrinus Fishing Cat 9. Platanista gangetica Ganges River Dolphin 10. Canis lupas pallipes Indian Wolf 11. Moschiola meminna Mouse Deer 12. Panthera pardus Panther 13. Manis crassicaudata Pangolin 14. Melursus ursinus Sloth Bear
(continued)
475Appendices
S. No. Scienti fi c name Common name
Schedule II 1. Macaca mulatta Rhesus Monkey 2. Semnopithecus entellus Hanuman Langur 3. Canis aureus Jackal 4. Vulpes bengalensis Indian Fox 5. Vulpes vulpes Red Fox 6. Felis chaus Jungle Cat 7. Lutragale perspicillata Smooth-coated Otter 8. Viverricula indica Small Indian Civet 9. Paradoxurus hermaphroditus Common Palm Civet 10. Herpestes edwardsii Grey Mongoose 11. Herpestes smithii Ruddy Mongoose 12. Petaurista philippensis Indian Giant Flying Squirrel Schedule III 1. Cervus unicolor Sambar 2. Axis axis Spotted Deer or Chital 3. Boselaphus tragocamelus Nilgai 4. Sus scrofa Wild Boar 5. Hyaena hyaena Indian Striped Hyaena Schedule IV 1. Lepus nigricollis Indian Hare 2. Funambulus pinnantii Five-striped Palm Squirrel 3. Hystrix indica Indian Porcupine Schedule V 1. – Rats, Mice 2. – Fruit Bats
Source: http://envfor.nic.in/legis/wildlife/wildlife1.html . Downloaded on Nov 25, 2012
Table 1b (continued)
476 Appendices
App
endi
x 2
Inte
rnat
iona
l, na
tiona
l and
sta
te le
vel a
war
ds f
or e
xcel
lenc
e in
the
fi eld
of
envi
ronm
enta
l sci
ence
s/w
ildlif
e sc
ienc
es
S. N
o.
Inte
rnat
iona
l aw
ards
C
ontr
ibut
ion
1.
Bir
dlif
e In
tern
atio
nal A
war
ds
To p
rom
ote
the
deve
lopm
ent o
f fu
ture
con
serv
atio
n le
ader
s an
d pr
ovid
e th
em w
ith th
e ca
paci
ty to
ad
dres
s th
e m
ost s
igni
fi can
t con
serv
atio
n is
sues
of
the
pres
ent t
ime.
The
CL
P fo
cuse
s on
bui
ldin
g th
e sk
ills
and
capa
bilit
ies
of y
oung
pro
fess
iona
ls b
y pr
ovid
ing
proj
ect g
rant
s, tr
aini
ng, m
ento
ring
an
d ne
twor
king
opp
ortu
nitie
s a.
Fu
ture
Con
serv
atio
nist
Aw
ards
U
S $1
2,50
0 ea
ch
b.
Con
serv
atio
n Fo
llow
-up
Aw
ards
U
p to
US
$25,
000
each
ava
ilabl
e on
ly to
pre
viou
s C
LP
Futu
re C
onse
rvat
ioni
st A
war
d w
inne
rs
c.
Con
serv
atio
n L
eade
rshi
p A
war
ds
US
$50,
000
each
ava
ilabl
e on
ly to
pre
viou
s C
LP
Follo
w-u
p A
war
d w
inne
rs
2.
Ani
mal
Wel
fare
Ins
titut
e, W
ashi
ngto
n D
C, U
SA
a. C
lark
R. B
avin
Wild
life
Law
Enf
orce
men
t A
war
d Fo
r di
stin
guis
hed
law
enf
orce
men
t in
wild
life
crim
e an
d tr
af fi c
king
b. S
chw
eitz
er M
edal
Fo
r ou
tsta
ndin
g ac
hiev
emen
t in
the
adva
ncem
ent o
f an
imal
wel
fare
3.
D
efen
ders
of
Wild
life
a.
Leg
acy
Aw
ard
b.
Spir
it of
Def
ende
rs A
war
d fo
r Pu
blic
Ser
vice
c.
Sp
irit
of D
efen
ders
Aw
ard
for
Scie
nce
d.
Spir
it of
Def
ende
rs A
war
d fo
r C
itize
n A
dvoc
acy
For
extr
aord
inar
y di
stin
guis
hed
serv
ice
tow
ards
wild
life
cons
erva
tion
4.
Dis
ney
Wor
ldw
ide
Con
serv
atio
n Fu
nd (
DW
CF)
1.
5 m
illio
n $
gran
t to
subs
tant
ial p
roje
cts
5.
H. B
ean
Aw
ard
from
the
Ass
ocia
tion
of Z
oos
and
Aqu
ariu
ms
Rec
ogni
zes
inst
itutio
ns th
at c
ontr
ibut
e to
the
repr
oduc
tive
succ
ess
of o
ne o
r m
ore
spec
ies
and/
or
subs
peci
es
6.
Nat
iona
l Wild
life
Ach
ieve
men
t Aw
ards
(U
SA)
also
kn
own
as “
Con
nie
Aw
ards
” N
atio
nal W
ildlif
e Fe
dera
tion,
USA
rec
ogni
zes
indi
vidu
als
and
orga
niza
tions
that
hav
e m
ade
outs
tand
ing
cont
ribu
tions
for
pro
tect
ing
wild
life
thro
ugh
educ
atio
n, a
dvoc
acy,
and
on-
the-
grou
nd
cons
erva
tion
7.
PETA
Aw
ards
: a.
Hum
anita
rian
Aw
ard
b. N
ancy
Ale
xend
ar A
war
d c.
Bee
Art
hur
Act
ivis
t Aw
ard
Gro
undb
reak
ing
wor
k fo
r an
imal
s an
d ho
nore
d ac
tivis
ts a
nd c
eleb
ritie
s fo
r th
eir
dedi
catio
n to
PE
TA’s
an
imal
rig
hts
cam
paig
ns a
roun
d th
e gl
obe
App
endi
x 2
477Appendices S.
No.
In
tern
atio
nal a
war
ds
Con
trib
utio
n
8.
Smith
soni
an F
ello
wsh
ip P
rogr
am
The
Res
earc
h In
tern
ship
Pro
gram
of
the
Nat
iona
l Zoo
’s C
onse
rvat
ion
and
Res
earc
h C
ente
r (C
RC
) as
a
unit
of th
e Sm
ithso
nian
Ins
titut
ion,
whi
ch c
ompe
titiv
ely
awar
ds b
oth
grad
uate
and
pos
t-gr
adua
te
fello
wsh
ips
each
yea
r 9.
T
he B
ritis
h T
rust
for
Orn
ithol
ogy’
s B
TO
-Han
son
Bus
ines
s B
ird
Cha
lleng
e Pr
izes
A
cel
ebra
tion
of th
e pa
rtne
rshi
p be
twee
n bu
sine
ss a
nd th
e en
viro
nmen
t, re
cogn
izin
g co
nser
vatio
n in
itiat
ives
by
com
pany
site
s th
roug
hout
the
UK
. Pri
zes
are
awar
ded
in th
e ca
tego
ries
of
bird
s,
com
mun
ity a
nd c
onse
rvat
ion
10.
The
Ind
iana
polis
Pri
ze s
pons
ored
by
Elli
Lily
Co.
Fo
unda
tion
and
give
n by
Ind
iana
polis
Zoo
, USA
T
he b
ienn
ial,
unre
stri
cted
$10
0,00
0 ca
sh p
rize
is g
iven
eve
ry o
ther
yea
r to
an
indi
vidu
al w
ho h
as m
ade
sign
i fi ca
nt s
trid
es in
con
serv
atio
n ef
fort
s in
volv
ing
an a
nim
al s
peci
es o
r m
ultip
le a
nim
al s
peci
es.
11.
The
Int
erna
tiona
l Uni
on f
or C
onse
rvat
ion
of
Nat
ure
(IU
CN
)-R
eute
rs—
CO
Mpl
us M
edia
A
war
ds b
y T
hom
son
Reu
ters
Fou
ndat
ion
and
CO
Mpl
us
A w
orld
wid
e co
mpe
titio
n in
env
iron
men
tal j
ourn
alis
m to
rec
ogni
ze e
xcel
lenc
e in
pro
fess
iona
l re
port
ing
on e
nvir
onm
enta
l and
sus
tain
able
dev
elop
men
t iss
ues.
A c
ash
priz
e of
US$
5,0
00 a
nd a
tr
avel
gra
nt to
atte
nd th
e aw
ard
func
tion
and
six
regi
onal
win
ners
rec
eive
cer
ti fi ca
tes
and
a ca
sh
priz
e of
US$
500
eac
h 12
. T
he I
nter
natio
nal W
ildlif
e Fi
lm F
estiv
al (
IWFF
) L
ife-
time
Ach
ieve
men
t Aw
ards
for
Con
serv
atio
n an
d M
edia
To in
divi
dual
s fr
om th
e m
edia
and
con
serv
atio
n fi e
lds
for
thei
r si
gni fi
cant
con
trib
utio
ns, e
xem
plar
y se
rvic
e, k
now
ledg
e, a
nd im
pact
on
wild
life
fi lm
mak
ing
and
wild
life
or m
arin
e co
nser
vatio
n
13.
The
Ruf
ford
Sm
all G
rant
Aw
ard
A g
rant
of
up to
£50
,000
as
inno
vatio
n aw
ards
are
giv
en to
sub
stan
tial p
roje
cts
havi
ng g
roun
d-br
eaki
ng
effe
cts
in n
atur
e co
nser
vatio
n in
the
deve
lopi
ng w
orld
14
. T
he W
ildlif
e So
ciet
y (T
WS)
Aw
ards
a.
A
ldo
Leo
pold
Mem
oria
l Aw
ard
For
dist
ingu
ishe
d se
rvic
e to
wild
life
cons
erva
tion.
It i
s th
e hi
ghes
t hon
or b
esto
wed
by
the
soci
ety
to
enco
urag
e an
d re
cogn
ize
exce
ptio
nal a
chie
vem
ents
in th
e di
ssem
inat
ion
of c
onse
rvat
ion
know
ledg
e to
the
publ
ic in
the
cate
gori
es o
f w
ritin
gs, m
edia
, pro
gram
s, a
nd r
elat
ed a
udio
-vis
ual w
orks
b.
E
thni
c an
d G
ende
r D
iver
sity
Aw
ard
Hon
ors
inno
vativ
e pr
ogra
ms
and
indi
vidu
als
that
pro
mot
e di
vers
ity in
em
ploy
men
t, ac
adem
ic
enro
llmen
t, an
d m
embe
rshi
p c.
Ji
m M
cDon
ough
Aw
ard
Rec
ogni
zes
cont
inuo
us o
utst
andi
ng s
ervi
ce to
any
are
a of
con
cern
to T
WS
d.
Don
ald
H. R
usch
Mem
oria
l Aw
ard
Rec
ogni
zes
a ce
rtifi
ed w
ildlif
e bi
olog
ist s
igni
fi can
tly c
ontr
ibut
ing
to th
e pr
ofes
sion
as
an a
ctiv
e T
WS
mem
ber
e.
Gam
e B
ird
Res
earc
h Sc
hola
rshi
p A
ssis
ts a
gra
duat
e st
uden
t stu
dyin
g up
land
gam
e bi
rd o
r w
ater
fow
l bio
logy
and
man
agem
ent
f.
TW
S Fe
llow
R
ecog
nize
s m
embe
rs w
ho h
ave
dist
ingu
ishe
d th
emse
lves
thro
ugh
exce
ptio
nal s
ervi
ce to
the
wild
life
prof
essi
on
g.
Wild
life
Publ
icat
ion
Aw
ards
R
ecog
nize
s ex
celle
nce
in s
cien
ti fi c
wri
ting
(art
icle
, mon
ogra
ph, b
ook,
and
edi
tors
hip)
(con
tinue
d)
478 Appendices
S. N
o.
Inte
rnat
iona
l aw
ards
C
ontr
ibut
ion
15.
Uni
ted
Nat
ions
Env
iron
men
t Pro
gram
(U
NE
P)
Aw
ards
a.
C
ham
pion
s O
f T
he E
arth
R
ecog
nize
s ou
tsta
ndin
g en
viro
nmen
tal l
eade
rs, w
heth
er in
divi
dual
s or
org
aniz
atio
ns, t
hat h
ave
exem
pli fi
ed in
spir
atio
n, v
isio
n, in
nova
tion,
lead
ersh
ip a
nd a
ctio
n fo
r th
e en
viro
nmen
t b.
U
NE
P Sa
saka
wa
Priz
e R
ecog
nize
s la
urea
tes
with
a p
rove
n re
cord
of
achi
evem
ent,
as w
ell a
s th
e po
tent
ial t
o m
ake
outs
tand
-in
g co
ntri
butio
ns to
the
envi
ronm
ent c
onsi
sten
t with
UN
EP’
s po
licy
and
obje
ctiv
es
c.
The
SE
ED
Aw
ard
Rec
ogni
zes
inno
vatio
n in
loca
l, en
viro
nmen
tally
res
pons
ible
and
sus
tain
able
ent
repr
eneu
rshi
p. T
he
awar
d is
a fl
agsh
ip p
rogr
amm
e of
the
SEE
D I
nitia
tive,
a p
artn
ersh
ip f
ound
ed b
y th
e U
nite
d N
atio
ns D
evel
opm
ent P
rogr
amm
e (U
ND
P), U
NE
P, a
nd th
e In
tern
atio
nal U
nion
for
Con
serv
atio
n of
Nat
ure
(IU
CN
) d.
T
he G
reen
Aw
ard
Star
R
ecog
nize
thos
e w
ho h
ave
mad
e re
mar
kabl
e ef
fort
s to
pre
vent
, pre
pare
for
, and
res
pond
to e
nvir
on-
men
tal d
isas
ters
aro
und
the
wor
ld. I
t is
a jo
int i
nitia
tive
betw
een
UN
EP,
the
UN
Of fi
ce f
or th
e co
ordi
natio
n of
hum
anita
rian
aff
airs
and
Gre
en C
ross
Int
erna
tiona
l e.
Fo
cus
on Y
our
wor
ld-U
NE
P In
tern
atio
nal
Phot
ogra
phy
Aw
ard
Rec
ogni
zes
artis
ts w
ho u
se p
hoto
grap
hs to
re fl
ect t
he d
iver
sity
of
the
plan
et a
nd it
s pe
ople
and
aim
s to
sho
wca
se p
artic
ipan
ts’
tale
nt a
s w
ell a
s th
eir
conc
ern
for
our
envi
ronm
ent
16.
Wild
life
Pres
erva
tion
Soci
ety
of A
usta
ralia
(W
PSA
) C
omm
unity
Wild
life
Con
serv
atio
n A
war
ds
A c
ryst
al tr
ophy
and
2,5
00 $
, giv
en e
ach
year
to r
ecog
nize
org
aniz
atio
ns w
hich
mak
e a
sign
i fi ca
nt
cont
ribu
tion
to th
e pr
eser
vatio
n of
Aus
tral
ian
wild
life
17.
Wild
life
Tru
st C
onse
rvat
ion
Aw
ard
and
Wild
life
Tru
st S
cien
tist A
war
d Fo
r pi
onee
ring
wor
k in
the
inno
vativ
e fi e
ld o
f co
nser
vatio
n m
edic
ine
whi
le w
orki
ng to
und
erst
and
the
links
bet
wee
n ec
osys
tem
s, w
ildlif
e an
d hu
man
hea
lth
18.
Wild
scre
en F
ilm F
estiv
al G
olde
n Pa
nda
Aw
ard
Giv
en to
the
wor
ld’s
bes
t fi lm
on
wild
life
and
envi
ronm
ent
19.
Wor
ld W
etla
nds
Net
wor
k (W
WN
)Glo
be A
war
ds:
a.
Gre
en G
lobe
b.
G
rey
Glo
be
c.
Blu
e G
lobe
For
the
best
wet
land
man
agem
ent p
ract
ice
(sup
port
ed b
y th
e Sp
anis
h Fu
ndac
ión
Bio
dive
rsid
ad)
a.
for
rest
ored
hab
itats
b.
fo
r w
etla
nds
in d
ange
r c.
fo
r w
etla
nd m
anag
emen
t
App
endi
x 2
(con
tinue
d)
479Appendices S.
No.
In
tern
atio
nal a
war
ds
Con
trib
utio
n
20.
WW
F Fe
llow
ship
s T
he $
200,
000
cash
aw
ard
goes
to f
und
grad
uate
fel
low
ship
s. T
he a
war
ds a
ims
to a
ckno
wle
dge
indi
vidu
als
mak
ing
pion
eeri
ng a
nd s
ubst
antia
l con
trib
utio
ns to
con
serv
atio
n as
wel
l as
fost
er th
e de
velo
pmen
t of
futu
re le
ader
s in
con
serv
atio
n.
a.
J. P
aul G
etty
Aw
ard
For
cons
erva
tion
lead
ersh
ip
b.
J. P
aul G
etty
Aw
ard
For
cons
erva
tion
c.
Paul
Get
ty A
war
d Fo
r po
litic
al c
onse
rvat
ion
lead
ersh
ip
Nat
iona
l (In
dian
) A
war
ds
1.
Raj
iv G
andh
i Wild
life
Con
serv
atio
n A
war
d C
ash
priz
e of
1 la
c ru
pees
is g
iven
to tw
o w
ildlif
e co
nser
vatio
nist
s an
nual
ly, h
avin
g th
e po
tent
ial t
o m
ake
a m
ajor
impa
ct o
n th
e co
nser
vatio
n of
wild
life
in th
e co
untr
y 2.
Sh
ri K
aila
sh S
ankh
la N
atio
nal W
ildlif
e Fe
llow
ship
A
war
d In
dian
citi
zens
eng
aged
in w
ildlif
e m
anag
emen
t/res
earc
h ar
e aw
arde
d ru
pees
4,0
00 p
er m
onth
in
addi
tion
to r
upee
s 18
,000
per
ann
um c
ontin
genc
y ev
ery
alte
rnat
e ye
ar
3.
Smal
l Gra
nt F
ello
wsh
ips
by C
entr
al Z
oo A
utho
rity
(C
ZA
) L
ocal
nee
d ba
sed
zoo
rese
arch
pro
ject
s in
the
fi eld
of
ex-s
itu
cons
erva
tion
and
scie
nti fi
c m
anag
emen
t of
ani
mal
s ar
e aw
arde
d R
s. 2
lacs
per
yea
r up
to a
max
imum
3 y
ears
by
this
sta
tuto
ry b
ody
unde
r th
e M
inis
try
of E
nvir
onm
ent a
nd F
ores
ts, G
over
nmen
t of
Indi
a 4.
T
he I
ndir
a G
andh
i Par
yava
ran
Pura
skar
(IG
PP)
Two
cash
pri
zes
of r
upee
s 5
lacs
eac
h, a
nd u
nder
the
indi
vidu
al c
ateg
ory
thre
e pr
izes
of
rupe
es 5
lacs
, 3
lacs
and
2 la
cs e
ach
are
awar
ded
for
over
all i
mpr
ovem
ent o
f th
e en
viro
nmen
t 5.
In
dira
Pri
yada
rshi
ni V
riks
ham
itra
Aw
ards
Pi
onee
ring
and
exe
mpl
ary
wor
k in
the
fi eld
of
affo
rest
atio
n an
d w
aste
land
dev
elop
men
t is
awar
ded
by a
cas
h aw
ard
of r
upee
s 25
0,00
0 6.
Pi
tam
bar
Pant
Nat
iona
l Env
iron
men
t Fel
low
ship
A
war
d O
utst
andi
ng w
ork
done
for
the
envi
ronm
ent p
rote
ctio
n
7.
B.P
. Pal
Nat
iona
l Env
iron
men
t Fel
low
ship
Aw
ard
for
Bio
dive
rsity
In
rec
ogni
tion
of s
igni
fi can
t res
earc
h an
d de
velo
pmen
t con
trib
utio
ns in
the
fi eld
s of
env
iron
men
tal
scie
nces
and
bio
dive
rsity
. 8.
N
atio
nal A
war
ds f
or E
xcel
lenc
e in
For
estr
y by
In
dian
Cou
ncil
of F
ores
try
Res
earc
h an
d E
duca
tion
(IC
FRE
)
Four
aw
ards
are
pre
sent
ed u
nder
this
cat
egor
y ca
rryi
ng a
sum
of
rupe
es 1
lac
for
orig
inal
and
ou
tsta
ndin
g w
ork/
rese
arch
in th
e fi e
lds
of f
ores
try
educ
atio
n, r
esea
rch
and
exte
nsio
n
(con
tinue
d)
480 Appendices
S. N
o.
Inte
rnat
iona
l aw
ards
C
ontr
ibut
ion
9.
Med
ini P
uras
kar
Yoj
ana
Four
cas
h aw
ards
are
pre
sent
ed u
nder
this
cat
egor
y to
Ind
ian
auth
ors
each
yea
r to
enc
oura
ge o
rigi
nal
wor
ks in
Hin
di o
n en
viro
nmen
t and
its
rela
ted
subj
ects
suc
h as
wild
life,
wat
er r
esou
rces
and
co
nser
vatio
n 10
. D
r. Sa
lim A
li N
atio
nal W
ildlif
e Fe
llow
ship
Aw
ard
The
fel
low
ship
is a
war
ded
for
a pe
riod
of
2 ye
ars
with
a s
tipen
d of
rup
ees
4,00
0 pe
r m
onth
, in
addi
tion
to r
upee
s 18
,000
per
ann
um a
s co
ntin
genc
y ex
pens
es f
or r
esea
rch
or e
xper
imen
tal
proj
ects
aim
ed a
t con
serv
ing
the
wild
life
heri
tage
of
Indi
a 11
. B
est E
nvir
onm
enta
l Inf
orm
atio
n Sy
stem
(E
NV
IS)
Cen
tre
Aw
ard
A c
ash
awar
d of
rup
ees
50,0
00 is
pre
sent
ed a
long
with
a c
erti fi
cate
eve
ry 2
yea
rs to
col
lect
, col
late
an
d di
ssem
inat
e in
form
atio
n on
the
stat
us o
f th
e co
untr
y’s
envi
ronm
ent
12.
Des
ert E
colo
gy F
ello
wsh
ip o
f Jo
dhpu
r U
nive
rsity
A
one
-tim
e en
dow
men
t of
rupe
es 6
lacs
(a
mon
thly
stip
end
of r
upee
s 3,
500
and
a co
ntin
genc
y gr
ant
of r
upee
s 1,
000
per
mon
th)
in r
ecog
nitio
n of
the
Bis
hnoi
com
mun
ity’s
con
trib
utio
n to
nat
ure
cons
erva
tion
and
to e
ncou
rage
stu
dies
in th
is fi
eld
13.
Am
rita
Dev
i Bis
hnoi
Wild
life
Prot
ectio
n A
war
d A
cas
h aw
ard
of r
upee
s 1
lac
is p
rese
nted
to in
divi
dual
s/in
stitu
tions
hav
ing
show
n ex
empl
ary
cour
age
or h
avin
g do
ne e
xem
plar
y w
ork
for
the
prot
ectio
n of
wild
life
14.
E.K
. Jan
aki A
mm
al N
atio
nal A
war
d fo
r Ta
xono
my
of P
lant
s an
d A
nim
als
For
outs
tand
ing
wor
d in
bot
anic
al a
nd z
oolo
gica
l tax
onom
y in
clud
ing
wor
k do
ne o
n m
icro
orga
nism
s
15.
Nat
iona
l Aw
ard
for
Prev
entio
n of
Pol
lutio
n A
trop
hy, a
cita
tion
and
rupe
es 1
lac
each
for
mee
ting
pollu
tion
prev
entio
n go
als
and
taki
ng
subs
tant
ial a
nd c
onsi
sten
t ste
ps f
or e
nvir
onm
enta
l im
prov
emen
t 16
. V
ishi
sht V
aigy
anik
Pur
aska
r To
two
Gro
up “
A”
scie
ntis
ts o
f th
e M
inis
try
of E
nvir
onm
ent a
nd F
ores
try
and
its a
ssoc
iate
d fo
rmat
ions
car
ry a
cas
h pr
ize
of r
upee
s 20
,000
and
is a
war
ded
ever
y ye
ar
17.
Raj
iv G
andh
i Env
iron
men
t Aw
ard
for
Cle
an
Tech
nolo
gy
For
deve
lopm
ent o
f th
e in
nova
tive
mod
i fi ca
tion
of e
xist
ing,
tech
nolo
gies
and
pra
ctic
es th
at s
ubst
an-
tially
red
uce
or p
reve
nt e
nvir
onm
enta
l pol
lutio
n. A
cas
h pr
ize
of r
upee
s 1
lac
is a
war
ded
to a
n in
dust
rial
uni
t 18
. N
atio
nal E
nvir
onm
enta
l Sci
ence
s Fe
llow
Pr
ogra
mm
e Is
aw
arde
d to
ten
youn
g sc
ient
ists
, with
a g
ener
ous
fello
wsh
ip w
ho a
re w
orki
ng in
the
fore
fron
t of
envi
ronm
enta
l sci
ence
s, e
ngin
eeri
ng a
nd te
chno
logy
pro
vidi
ng th
e op
port
unity
to p
erfo
rm
cutti
ng-e
dge
rese
arch
on
criti
cal e
nvir
onm
enta
l iss
ues
in c
olla
bora
tion
with
lead
ing
inst
itute
s an
d sc
ient
ists
in I
ndia
and
abr
oad
App
endi
x 2
(con
tinue
d)
481Appendices S.
No.
In
tern
atio
nal a
war
ds
Con
trib
utio
n
19.
Ass
ocia
tion
for
Spec
ies
Con
serv
atio
n In
Ind
ia
(ASC
I)
Prov
ides
an
open
tran
spar
ent a
nd o
n-lin
e fo
rum
for
invi
ting
prop
osal
s an
d ap
peal
s fr
om in
divi
dual
s,
actio
n gr
oups
, res
earc
hers
and
Pro
tect
ed A
rea
man
ager
s se
ekin
g fi n
anci
al, m
ater
ial o
r tr
aine
d re
sear
ch s
uppo
rt f
or p
rote
ctio
n an
d co
nser
vatio
n of
less
er k
now
n sa
nctu
arie
s or
site
s of
con
serv
a-tio
n im
port
ance
20
. K
umbl
e W
ildlif
e In
stitu
te
a.
The
Jum
bo F
und
Wild
life
Aw
ards
b.
Fo
ot S
oldi
er o
f K
arna
taka
c.
E
xem
plar
y R
ange
For
est O
f fi ce
r d.
O
utst
andi
ng C
ivil
Serv
ant
e.
Wild
life
Lea
ders
hip
Aw
ard
f.
E
xcep
tiona
l App
lied
Con
serv
atio
n Sc
ient
ist
Var
ious
cat
egor
ies
of a
war
ds a
re g
iven
to in
divi
dual
s fo
r si
gni fi
cant
wild
life
cons
erva
tion
wor
k
21.
a.
The
San
ctua
ry-R
BS
Wild
life
Aw
ard
b.
Lif
etim
e Se
rvic
e A
war
d,
c Fi
ve W
ildlif
e Se
rvic
e A
war
ds
d.
Gre
en T
each
er A
war
d e.
T
hree
You
ng N
atur
alis
t Aw
ards
f.
W
ind
unde
r th
e W
ings
Aw
ard
g.
Thr
ee W
ildlif
e Ph
otog
raph
y A
war
ds
To r
ecog
nise
the
best
in th
e fi e
ld o
f w
ildlif
e co
nser
vatio
n an
d to
cel
ebra
te th
e un
sung
her
oes
of I
ndia
w
ho a
re d
efen
ding
her
wild
erne
sses
and
con
sequ
ently
saf
egua
rdin
g he
r fo
od a
nd w
ater
sec
urity
. C
ash
priz
es r
angi
ng f
rom
150
,000
to 2
5,00
0 ru
pees
are
giv
en
22.
Tra
vel O
pera
tors
for
Tig
ers
(TO
FT)
Wild
life
Tour
ism
Aw
ards
T
he L
odge
Nat
ural
ist o
f th
e ye
ar
The
fi rs
t eve
r aw
ards
des
igne
d to
hig
hlig
ht th
e ve
ry b
est o
pera
tors
, pro
vide
rs, e
xper
ts a
nd in
divi
dual
s m
akin
g a
diff
eren
ce in
sup
port
of
the
fore
st a
nd ti
ger
cons
erva
tion
thro
ugh
the
use
of r
espo
nsib
le
and
sust
aina
ble
wild
life
tour
ism
23
. W
ildlif
e Pr
otec
tion
Soci
ety
Of
Indi
a (W
PSI)
a.
T
iger
Pro
tect
ion
Aw
ard
b.
Aw
ard
for
info
rmat
ion
that
lead
to s
eizu
re o
f tig
er p
arts
c.
Su
ppor
t to
pros
ecut
ion
of w
ildlif
e co
urt c
ases
To b
ring
a n
ew f
ocus
to th
e da
untin
g ta
sk o
f ta
cklin
g In
dia’
s gr
owin
g w
ildlif
e cr
isis
by
prov
idin
g su
ppor
t and
info
rmat
ion
to g
over
nmen
t aut
hori
ties
to c
omba
t poa
chin
g an
d th
e es
cala
ting
illeg
al
wild
life
trad
e pa
rtic
ular
ly o
f w
ild ti
gers
and
pro
vide
sup
port
for
res
earc
h pr
ojec
ts
24.
Wild
life
Tru
st o
f In
dia
(WT
I)
Wild
aid
of
belo
w 1
50,0
00 r
upee
s is
pro
vide
d as
sup
port
to in
divi
dual
s an
d gr
ass-
root
org
aniz
atio
ns,
doin
g sm
all,
shor
t and
med
ium
term
inte
rven
tions
to a
ddre
ss u
rgen
t or
criti
cal c
onse
rvat
ion
need
s.
The
WT
I fu
nctio
ns th
roug
h its
two
divi
sion
s, E
xecu
tive
Dir
ecto
r’s
Dis
cret
iona
ry G
rant
(E
DD
G)
and
Rap
id A
ctio
n Pr
ojec
ts (
RA
P). I
t is
non-
bure
aucr
atic
, rap
id in
impl
emen
tatio
n an
d ca
n re
act t
o re
ques
ts, i
f re
quir
ed, w
ithin
24
hrs.
(con
tinue
d)
482 Appendices
S. N
o.
Inte
rnat
iona
l aw
ards
C
ontr
ibut
ion
25.
Wor
ld W
ide
Fund
for
Nat
ure,
Ind
ia (
WW
F-In
dia)
In
stitu
ted
join
tly b
y W
WF-
Indi
a an
d th
e Pa
ci fi c
Asi
a T
rave
l Ass
ocia
tion
(PA
TA)
a.
WW
F-PA
TA J
eev
Mitr
a A
war
d Tw
o A
war
ds (
Rup
ees
50,0
00 a
nd a
cita
tion)
for
eac
h in
divi
dual
s w
ho h
ave
mad
e an
out
stan
ding
and
la
stin
g co
ntri
butio
n to
wild
life
cons
erva
tion
in I
ndia
b.
W
WF-
PATA
Van
yaje
ev M
itra
Sang
atha
n R
upee
s 1
lac
and
a ci
tatio
n to
an
orga
niza
tion
for
outs
tand
ing
and
last
ing
cont
ribu
tion
to w
ildlif
e co
nser
vatio
n in
Ind
ia
c.
WW
F-PA
TA V
anya
jeev
Mitr
a Sa
mud
aya
Rup
ees
1 la
c an
d a
cita
tion
is g
iven
to a
com
mun
ity le
vel i
nstit
utio
n or
gro
up, p
refe
rabl
y w
orki
ng in
ru
ral a
reas
for
out
stan
ding
and
last
ing
cont
ribu
tion
to w
ildlif
e co
nser
vatio
n in
Ind
ia
Raj
asth
an S
tate
Aw
ards
1.
V
riks
ha V
ardh
ak P
uras
kar
For
plan
tatio
n /r
efor
esta
tion
in m
inin
g ar
eas
and
dete
rior
atin
g fo
rest
are
as
2.
Van
Pra
hari
Pur
aska
r Fo
r fo
rest
con
serv
atio
n an
d m
anag
emen
t 3.
V
an V
itara
k Pu
rask
ar
For
fore
st e
xten
sion
4.
Fo
rest
Pub
licat
ion
Aw
ard
For
orig
inal
boo
k/pu
blic
atio
n in
for
estr
y 5.
V
anik
i Pan
dit P
uras
kar
For
best
wor
ker
in f
ores
t con
serv
atio
n an
d ex
tens
ion
6.
Am
rita
devi
Mem
mor
ial A
war
d sc
hem
e a.
To
Ins
titut
ions
/org
aniz
atio
ns
b.
To I
ndiv
idua
l for
for
est d
evel
opm
ent a
nd
cons
erva
tion
c.
To in
divi
dual
for
wild
life
cons
erva
tion
To o
rgan
izat
ions
whi
ch h
ave
deve
lope
d m
ore
than
20
ha o
f la
nd a
nd in
divi
dual
/org
aniz
atio
n w
orke
d be
st in
for
est d
evel
opm
ent a
nd c
onse
rvat
ion
App
endi
x 2
(con
tinue
d)
483Appendices
Appendix 3 Academic and professional bodies offering undergraduate and postgraduate courses and doctoral/post-doctoral research in ecology, forestry and wildlife science in India
S. No. Name of the institution Courses offered
1. Wildlife Institute of India, Post Box 18, Chandrabani Dehra Dun, Uttarakhand, India
Masters/ P.G. Diploma/ Certi fi cate Courses in Wildlife Management
2. Forestry Research Institute, Dehra Dun, Uttrakhand, India
M.Sc. Forestry/ Wood Science and Technology/ Environment Management
Post Masters Diploma: i. Natural Resource Management ii. Non-wood Forest Products P.G. Diploma in Pulp & Paper Technolgy
3. Indian Institute of Forest Management, Nehru Nagar, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India
PG Diploma in Forestry Management
4. Birsa Agricultural University, Kanke, Ranchi, Jharkhand, India
B.Sc./M.Sc. Forestry
5. Centre for Wildlife Studies, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
M.Sc. Wildlife Biology and Conservation
6. The Indian Institute of Ecology and Environment, A-15, Paryavaran Complex, Saket-IGNOU Road, New Delhi, India
B. Sc./ M.Sc. Ecology and Environment/ Disaster Mitigation/ Sustainable Development/ Eco Tourism/ Pollution Control
7. National Centre for Biological Science (NCBS), Gandhi Krishi Vigyan Kendra (GKVK), Bellary Road, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
M.Sc. Wildlife Biology and Conservation
8. Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, India
M.Sc. Wildlife Science
9. Andhra University, Waltair, Vishakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, India
Diploma & Certi fi cate Courses in Environment and Wildlife
10. Anna University, Coimbtore, Tamil Nadu, India
PG Diploma in Environmental Engineering 1-Year PG Diploma in Environmental
Science 11. APS University, Rewa, Madhya
Pradesh, India 1-Year P.G. Diploma in Environmental
Impact Assessment (PGDEIA) 1-Year Diploma in Environmental Science
12. AVC College, Mayuram, Nagapattinam, Tamil Nadu, India
M.Sc. Wildlife Biology
13. B.R. Ambedkar University, Agra, Uttar Pradesh, India
M.Sc. Environmental Toxicology
14. Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India
M. Sc. Environment and Wildlife Science
15. Bangalore University, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
M. Sc. Environment Science
16. Barkatullah Vishwavidyalaya, Hoshangabad Road, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India
1-Year PG Diploma in Environmental Management
1-Year PG Diploma in Environmental Law 17. Bharathidasan University,
Tiruchirapalli, Tamil Nadu, India PG Diploma in Environmental Science.
(continued)
Appendix 3
484 Appendices
Appendix 3 (continued)
S. No. Name of the institution Courses offered
18. Bharati Vidyapeeth (Deemed University), Lal Bahadur Shastri Marg, Pune, Maharashtra, India
1-Year Diploma in Environmental Management
1-Year Diploma in Environmental Education 19. Bombay Natural History Society
(BNHS), Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Correspondence Courses: Marine Biodiversity Conservation Awareness Programme in Basic
Ornithology, On-line course: Leadership in Biodiversity
Conservation 20. Centre for Environmental Law, New
Delhi, India Diploma in Environmental Law
21. Centre for Wildlife Studies, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India run by Wildlife Conservation Society of India
M.Sc. Wildlife Biology and Conservation
22. College of Forestry, Trissure, Kerala, India
M.Sc. Wildlife Studies
23. Delhi University, Delhi, India B.Sc./ M.Sc. Environmental Science 24. Dimoria College, Guwahati, Assam,
India B.Sc. Forestry and Wildlife Management
(Vocational Course) Diploma & Certi fi cate Courses in
Environment and Wildlife Management 25. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar Open University,
Road No.46, Jubilee Hills, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India
1-Year PG Diploma in Environmental Studies
26. Dr. Harisingh Gour Vishwavidyalaya, Gour Nagar, Sagar, Madhya Pradesh, India
1-Year Diploma in Environmental Geology
27. H.N.Bahuguna Garhwal University, Uttar Pradesh, India
B.Sc./ M.Sc. Forestry
28. Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU), Maidan Garhi, New Delhi, India
Certi fi cate Course in Environmental Studies
29. Jamia Millia Islamia, Mohammad Ali Jauhar Marg, Jamia Nagar, New Delhi, India
Diploma course in Environmental Engineering and Environmental Studies
30. Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India
M.Sc. Ecology and Environment
31. Jiwaji University, Vidya Vihar, Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh, India
1-Year PG Diploma in Environmental Sciences
32. Mahatma Gandhi Gramoday Vishwavidyalaya, Satna, Madhya Pradesh, India
1-Year Diploma in Yoga Environment
33. Mangalore University, Mangalagangothri, Mangalore, Karnataka, India
1-Year PG Diploma in Environmental Science
(continued)
485Appendices
S. No. Name of the institution Courses offered
34. Manonmaniam Sundaranar University, Abishekapatti, Tirunelvelli, Tamil Nadu, India
PG Diploma in Environmental Ecology and Environmental Laws
35. MS University, Baroda, Fatheganj, Vadodara, Gujarat, India
1-Year Diploma in Environment Science
36. National Institute of Environment, 1/169 Vikas Nagar, Kursi Road, Aliganj, Lucknow, India
Correspondence Courses: 2-Year PG Diploma in Environment
Management. 3-Year PG Diploma in Environmental
Consultancy Services 37. North Orissa University, Baripada,
Orissa, India M.Sc. Wildlife Studies
38. Purvanchal University, Devkali Jasopur, Saraykhaja, Jaunpur, Uttar Pradesh, India
1-Year Diploma in Environmental Science
39. Salim Ali Centre for Ornithology and Natural History, (SACON), Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India
Certi fi cate Course in Ornithology and Advanced Research
40. Salim Ali School of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, Pondicherrry, India
M.Sc. Ecology and Ph.D. programme
41. School of Planning and Architecture, Indraprastha Estate, New Delhi, India
Ph.D. in Environmental Planning
42. St. Joseph’s College, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
PG Diploma in Environment Science
43. The Centre for Environmental Education, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India
Courses in Environment Education and Field Trainings
44. University of Lucknow, Badshah Bagh, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India
PG Diploma in Environmental Laws
45. University of Rajasthan, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India
1-Year Diploma in Environmental Studies and Environment Engineering
46. Vasantdada Sugar Institute, Manjari, Tal Haveli, Pune, Maharashtra, India
PG Diploma in Environmental Science
47. Vikram University, Kothi Road, Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh, India
1-Year PG Diploma in Environmental Management
1-Year PG Diploma in Environmental Biology
Note: All the above-mentioned universities and educational institutes are also involved in multiple research activities including doctoral and post-doctoral programs
Appendix 3 (continued)
486 Appendices
App
endi
x 4
Key
org
aniz
atio
ns f
rom
Ind
ia a
nd a
broa
d w
orki
ng to
war
ds a
nim
al w
elfa
re, e
colo
gy, a
nd w
ildlif
e bi
olog
y an
d co
nser
vatio
n
S. N
o.
Nam
e of
the
Org
aniz
atio
n A
ims
and
obje
ctiv
es
1.
21st
Cen
tury
Tig
er, P
etw
orth
Roa
d, H
asle
mer
e,
Surr
ey G
U27
3B
G
It is
a w
ild ti
ger
cons
erva
tion
allia
nce
with
the
Zoo
logi
cal S
ocie
ty o
f L
ondo
n. I
nitia
lly
conc
entr
ated
its
fund
s on
pro
ject
s in
Ind
ia, S
umat
ra a
nd th
e R
ussi
an F
ar E
ast b
ut h
as
expa
nded
to in
clud
e a
proj
ect i
n M
alay
sia
and
one
in C
ambo
dia
with
the
Bri
tish
Gov
ernm
ent f
undi
ng
2.
Afr
ican
Con
serv
atio
n Fo
unda
tion
(AC
F)
A f
orum
for
sha
ring
of
info
rmat
ion
abou
t fel
low
ship
s, f
undi
ng o
ppor
tuni
ties,
trav
el
gran
ts, e
tc. o
f in
tere
st to
stu
dent
s an
d pr
ofes
sion
als
invo
lved
in e
nvir
onm
enta
l co
nser
vatio
n in
Afr
ica
3.
Ani
mal
Wel
fare
Ins
titut
e (A
WI)
, Was
hing
ton
DC
, USA
A
WI
has
soug
ht to
alle
viat
e th
e su
ffer
ing
in fl i
cted
on
anim
als
by p
eopl
e. T
oday
, one
of
thei
r gr
eate
st a
reas
of
emph
asis
is c
ruel
ani
mal
fac
tori
es, a
nim
als
in la
bora
tori
es
incl
udin
g pr
omot
ion
of d
evel
opm
ent o
f no
n-an
imal
test
ing
met
hods
and
pre
vent
ion
of
pain
ful e
xper
imen
ts o
n an
imal
s, fi
ght f
or p
rote
ctio
n of
thre
aten
ed a
nd e
ndan
gere
d sp
ecie
s of
fau
na a
nd fl
ora,
to p
rese
rve
the
ban
on c
omm
erci
al w
halin
g, to
pro
tect
all
mar
ine
life
agai
nst t
he p
rolif
erat
ion
of h
uman
-gen
erat
ed o
cean
noi
se in
clud
ing
activ
e so
nar
and
seis
mic
air
gun
s, m
inim
ize
the
impa
cts
of a
ll hu
man
act
ions
det
rim
enta
l to
enda
nger
ed s
peci
es, i
nclu
ding
the
dest
ruct
ion
of n
atur
al f
ores
ts c
onta
inin
g an
cien
t tr
ees,
and
pol
lutio
n of
the
ocea
ns d
estr
oyin
g ev
ery
kind
of
mar
ine
life
4.
Bir
dlif
e In
tern
atio
nal,
UK
It
is a
glo
bal p
artn
ersh
ip o
f co
nser
vatio
n or
gani
satio
ns th
at s
triv
es to
con
serv
e bi
rds,
thei
r ha
bita
ts a
nd g
loba
l bio
dive
rsity
, wor
king
with
peo
ple
tow
ards
sus
tain
abili
ty in
the
use
of
natu
ral r
esou
rces
. It o
pera
tes
in o
ver
one
hund
red
coun
trie
s an
d te
rrito
ries
wor
ldw
ide.
5.
B
irds
of
Prey
Fou
ndat
ion,
USA
It
is a
non
pro fi
t org
aniz
atio
n w
hose
mis
sion
is to
reh
abili
tate
inju
red
and
orph
aned
rap
tors
ba
ck in
to th
e w
ild. I
t is
a la
rges
t rap
tor
cent
er in
the
Col
orad
o, a
dmitt
ing
over
500
in
jure
d an
d or
phan
ed b
irds
fro
m a
ll ov
er th
e st
ate
each
yea
r 6.
C
onse
rvat
ion
Inte
rnat
iona
l (C
I), U
SA
It is
a n
on-p
ro fi t
org
aniz
atio
n in
Was
hing
ton
DC
, tha
t see
ks to
pro
tect
ear
th’s
bio
dive
rsity
ho
tspo
ts a
s w
ell a
s m
arin
e re
gion
s ar
ound
the
glob
e.It
wor
ks in
mor
e th
an 4
0 co
untr
ies,
maj
ority
bei
ng th
e de
velo
ping
nat
ions
. 7.
D
efen
ders
of
Wild
life,
USA
It
is a
nat
iona
l, no
npro
fi t m
embe
rshi
p or
gani
zatio
n de
dica
ted
to th
e pr
otec
tion
of a
ll na
tive
anim
als
and
plan
ts in
thei
r na
tura
l com
mun
ities
in th
e U
SA
App
endi
x 4
487Appendices S.
No.
N
ame
of th
e O
rgan
izat
ion
Aim
s an
d ob
ject
ives
8.
Dis
ney
Wor
ldw
ide
Con
serv
atio
n Fu
nd (
DW
CF)
T
he f
undi
ng e
nabl
es n
onpr
o fi t o
rgan
izat
ions
to p
rovi
de s
uppo
rt f
or m
ore
than
45
spec
ies
acro
ss th
e gl
obe—
from
pro
tect
ing
the
Cri
tical
ly E
ndan
gere
d Su
mat
ran
Rhi
no in
In
done
sia,
to tr
acki
ng n
orth
ern
jagu
ars
in th
e fo
othi
lls o
f M
exic
o, to
stu
dyin
g th
e th
reat
s of
the
enda
nger
ed G
reen
Sea
Tur
tle. A
long
with
a f
ocus
on
supp
ort f
or s
peci
es
and
habi
tat c
onse
rvat
ion
scie
nce,
the
DW
CF
enco
urag
es p
rogr
ams
that
eng
age
loca
l re
side
nts
and
bene
fi t b
oth
hum
an a
nd a
nim
al c
omm
uniti
es
9.
Ear
th W
atch
Ins
titut
e, B
osto
n, U
SA
It is
wor
king
for
toda
y’s
mos
t pre
ssin
g en
viro
nmen
tal e
mer
genc
ies—
clim
ate
chan
ge,
decl
inin
g oc
ean
heal
th, u
nsus
tain
able
res
ourc
e m
anag
emen
t, an
d th
reat
ened
cul
ture
by
brin
ging
toge
ther
an
incl
usiv
e co
mm
unity
of
scie
ntis
ts, c
orpo
rate
and
non
-pro
fi t
part
ners
, tea
cher
s, s
tude
nts,
and
eve
ryda
y ci
tizen
s.
10.
Gal
apag
os M
arin
e B
iodi
vers
ity F
und
(GM
BF)
an
d th
e N
atio
nal F
ores
t Fou
ndat
ion
Est
ablis
hed
in 2
006
by th
e W
WF
Gal
ápag
os P
rogr
am in
col
labo
ratio
n w
ith E
cove
ntur
a,
an E
cuad
oria
n-ba
sed
tour
ope
rato
r w
hich
ope
rate
s in
the
Gal
ápag
os I
slan
ds, a
nd
Aer
ogal
, an
Ecu
ador
ian
airl
ine
com
pany
with
an
aim
to c
ontr
ibut
e to
the
cons
erva
tion
of th
e A
rchi
pela
go b
y su
ppor
ting
proj
ects
rel
ated
to m
arin
e co
nser
vatio
n an
d ed
ucat
ion.
11
. G
loba
l Env
iron
men
t Fac
ility
(G
EF)
UN
DP
Smal
l G
rant
s Pr
ogra
m o
f C
EE
Se
eks
to s
uppo
rt in
itiat
ives
whi
ch d
emon
stra
te c
omm
unity
-bas
ed in
nova
tive,
gen
der
sens
itive
, par
ticip
ator
y ap
proa
ches
and
less
ons
lear
ned
from
oth
er d
evel
opm
ent
proj
ects
that
lead
to r
educ
e th
reat
s to
the
loca
l and
glo
bal e
nvir
onm
ent.
The
GE
F SG
P w
as la
unch
ed in
199
1by
Uni
ted
Nat
ions
Dev
elop
men
t Pro
gram
(U
ND
P) to
ass
ist
deve
lopi
ng c
ount
ries
in f
ul fi l
ling
thei
r co
mm
itmen
t tow
ards
the
prot
ectio
n of
the
glob
al e
nvir
onm
ent.
GE
F U
ND
P SG
P is
cur
rent
ly w
orki
ng in
114
cou
ntri
es w
orld
-w
ide.
The
pro
gram
was
sta
rted
in I
ndia
fro
m th
e ye
ar 1
996–
1997
12
. In
tern
atio
nal F
ound
atio
n fo
r th
e C
onse
rvat
ion
of
Nat
ural
Res
ourc
es (
IFC
NR
) E
stab
lishe
d in
199
5 in
the
Com
mon
wea
lth o
f V
irgi
nia,
des
crib
es it
self
as
a in
depe
nden
t N
GO
that
rep
rese
nts
a br
oad
rang
e of
indi
vidu
als,
aca
dem
ic in
stitu
tions
, cor
pora
tions
, as
soci
atio
ns, i
ndus
trie
s, c
ultu
res,
NG
Os
and
gove
rnm
ent a
genc
ies
boun
d to
geth
er b
y th
e de
sire
to p
rom
ote
resp
onsi
ble,
sus
tain
able
, env
iron
men
tally
com
patib
le, a
nd
soci
ally
just
use
and
con
serv
atio
n of
the
eart
h’s
natu
ral r
esou
rces
. 13
. In
tern
atio
nal R
hino
Fou
ndat
ion
It is
ded
icat
ed to
the
surv
ival
of
the
wor
ld’s
rhi
no s
peci
es th
roug
h co
nser
vatio
n an
d re
sear
ch a
nd p
rovi
des
tech
nica
l and
fi na
ncia
l res
ourc
es. I
t pro
mot
es th
e in
volv
emen
t of
loca
l com
mun
ities
in th
e co
nser
vatio
n of
rhi
nos
and
crea
tes
endu
ring
(se
lf-s
usta
inin
g)
rhin
o co
nser
vatio
n pr
ogra
ms
thro
ugh
“fac
ilita
tive”
and
“ca
taly
tic”
appr
oach
es
(con
tinue
d)
488 Appendices
S. N
o.
Nam
e of
the
Org
aniz
atio
n A
ims
and
obje
ctiv
es
14.
Nat
iona
l Wild
life
Fede
ratio
n (N
WF)
, USA
It
is w
orki
ng to
pro
tect
the
ecos
yste
ms
that
are
mos
t cri
tical
to n
ativ
e w
ildlif
e. N
WF
wor
ks to
impr
ove
fede
ral a
nd s
tate
pol
icie
s th
at w
ill im
prov
e w
ildlif
e co
nser
vatio
n on
hu
ndre
ds o
f m
illio
ns o
f ac
res
of p
ublic
, tri
bal a
nd p
riva
te la
nds,
incl
udin
g th
ousa
nds
of
mile
s of
str
eam
s, r
iver
s, la
kes
and
coas
tline
s ac
ross
Am
eric
a. T
he o
rgan
izat
ion
enco
urag
es C
ongr
ess
to p
ass
legi
slat
ion
that
incl
udes
ade
quat
e fu
ndin
g fo
r na
tura
l re
sour
ces
and
dire
cts
fede
ral a
genc
ies
to in
clud
e cl
imat
e sc
ienc
e in
thei
r w
ildlif
e co
nser
vatio
n m
anag
emen
t pla
ns
15.
Nat
ure
Con
serv
ancy
, Arl
ingt
on, V
A, U
SA
It is
the
lead
ing
cons
erva
tion
orga
niza
tion
wor
king
aro
und
the
wor
ld to
pro
tect
eco
logi
-ca
lly im
port
ant l
ands
and
wat
ers
for
natu
re a
nd p
eopl
e 16
. R
uffo
rd F
ound
atio
n, U
K
The
Ruf
ford
Fou
ndat
ion
is a
n in
depe
nden
t gra
nt-m
akin
g tr
ust.
It s
uppo
rts
natu
re
cons
erva
tion
proj
ects
in d
evel
opin
g co
untr
ies
unde
rtak
en b
y sm
all t
o m
ediu
m-s
ized
or
gani
satio
ns. T
he f
ound
atio
n no
long
er s
uppo
rts
natu
re c
onse
rvat
ion
proj
ects
in th
e U
K. I
n ad
ditio
n th
ere
is a
ver
y lim
ited
amou
nt o
f fu
ndin
g di
rect
ed to
war
ds s
ocia
l w
elfa
re is
sues
in th
e U
K a
nd o
vers
eas
deve
lopm
ent
17.
Smith
soni
an I
nstit
ute,
USA
It
is a
n ed
ucat
iona
l and
res
earc
h in
stitu
te a
nd a
ssoc
iate
d m
useu
m c
ompl
ex, a
dmin
iste
red
and
fund
ed b
y th
e G
over
nmen
t of
the
Uni
ted
Stat
es a
nd b
y fu
nds
from
its
endo
wm
ent,
cont
ribu
tions
, and
pro
fi ts
from
its
reta
il op
erat
ions
, con
cess
ions
, lic
ensi
ng a
ctiv
ities
an
d m
agaz
ines
. Whi
le m
ost o
f its
19
mus
eum
s, z
oos,
and
nin
e re
sear
ch c
ente
rs
faci
litie
s ar
e lo
cate
d in
Was
hing
ton,
D.C
., ot
hers
are
als
o ba
sed
at N
ew Y
ork
City
, V
irgi
nia,
Pan
ama,
and
els
ewhe
re. T
he S
mith
soni
an I
nstit
utio
n is
the
larg
est m
useu
m
com
plex
in th
e w
orld
18
. So
ciet
y fo
r Pr
even
tion
of C
ruel
ty to
Ani
mal
s (S
PCA
) In
tern
atio
nal,
New
Yor
k, U
SA
SPC
A I
nter
natio
nal s
triv
es to
ass
ist t
he g
row
th a
nd im
pact
of
inde
pend
ent s
helte
rs
thro
ugh
allia
nce
build
ing,
info
rmat
ion
netw
orki
ng a
nd n
atio
nal a
nd in
tern
atio
nal
prog
ram
s. O
utre
ach
prog
ram
s th
at h
elp
thou
sand
s of
ani
mal
s, r
esul
ting
in a
dra
stic
re
duct
ion
of a
nim
al s
uffe
ring
and
abu
se th
roug
hout
this
cou
ntry
and
the
wor
ld S
PCA
. It
pro
vide
s fi n
anci
al s
uppo
rt a
t the
loca
l lev
el b
y aw
ardi
ng f
our
to s
ix e
mer
genc
y gr
ants
eve
ry m
onth
to s
elec
ted
anim
al w
elfa
re o
rgan
izat
ions
whi
ch m
akes
a b
ig
diff
eren
ce to
str
uggl
ing
shel
ters
, bot
h in
the
USA
and
wor
ldw
ide,
and
hel
p to
impr
ove
phys
ical
con
ditio
ns, e
nhan
ce s
pay
and
neut
er p
rogr
ams
and
ultim
atel
y re
duce
eu
than
asia
rat
es
App
endi
x 4
(con
tinue
d)
489Appendices S.
No.
N
ame
of th
e O
rgan
izat
ion
Aim
s an
d ob
ject
ives
19.
The
Ass
ocia
tion
of Z
oos
and
Aqu
ariu
ms
(AZ
A)
AZ
A is
con
cern
ed a
bout
spe
cies
sur
viva
l and
eco
syst
em h
ealth
. An
abun
danc
e of
ed
ucat
iona
l inf
orm
atio
n, p
lann
ing
tool
s, d
atab
ases
, fun
ding
sou
rces
, aw
ards
, re
intr
oduc
tion
prog
ram
s, a
nd s
peci
aliz
ed c
onse
rvat
ion
proj
ects
hav
e be
en c
reat
ed to
ad
vanc
e an
imal
con
serv
atio
n in
itiat
ives
and
str
ateg
ies.
AZ
A-a
ccre
dite
d zo
os a
nd
aqua
rium
s se
rve
as c
onse
rvat
ion
cent
ers
that
are
con
cern
ed a
bout
eco
syst
em h
ealth
, ta
ke r
espo
nsib
ility
for
spe
cies
sur
viva
l, co
ntri
bute
to r
esea
rch,
con
serv
atio
n, a
nd
educ
atio
n, a
nd p
rovi
de s
ocie
ty th
e op
port
unity
to d
evel
op p
erso
nal c
onne
ctio
ns w
ith
the
anim
als
in th
eir
care
20
. T
he B
ritis
h T
rust
for
Orn
ithol
ogy’
s B
TO
-Han
son
The
Bri
tish
Tru
st f
or O
rnith
olog
y ha
s ex
iste
d si
nce
1933
as
an in
depe
nden
t, sc
ient
i fi c
rese
arch
trus
t, in
vest
igat
ing
the
popu
latio
ns, m
ovem
ents
and
eco
logy
of
wild
bir
ds in
th
e B
ritis
h Is
les,
spe
cial
ly th
e de
sign
and
impl
emen
tatio
n of
vol
unte
er w
ild b
ird
surv
eys
21.
The
Hoe
dspr
uit E
ndan
gere
d Sp
ecie
s C
entr
e,
USA
It
foc
uses
on
the
cons
erva
tion
of r
are,
vul
nera
ble
or e
ndan
gere
d an
imal
s an
d is
act
ivel
y in
volv
ed in
the
bree
ding
of
enda
nger
ed, v
ulne
rabl
e or
rar
e an
imal
spe
cies
; the
ed
ucat
ion
of le
arne
rs, s
tude
nts
and
the
gene
ral p
ublic
. Che
etah
con
serv
atio
n is
one
of
the
core
dis
cipl
ines
alo
ng w
ith a
n es
tabl
ishm
ent o
f ca
ptiv
e-br
ed c
heet
ahs
back
into
the
wild
; the
trea
tmen
t and
reh
abili
tatio
n of
wild
ani
mal
s th
at a
re b
roug
ht to
the
cent
re
22.
The
Int
erna
tiona
l Uni
on f
or C
onse
rvat
ion
of
Nat
ure
(IU
CN
), G
enev
a, S
witz
erla
nd
Hel
ps th
e w
orld
fi nd
pra
gmat
ic s
olut
ions
to th
e m
ost p
ress
ing
envi
ronm
ent a
nd d
evel
op-
men
t cha
lleng
es a
nd s
uppo
rts
scie
nti fi
c re
sear
ch, m
anag
es fi
eld
proj
ects
all
over
the
wor
ld, a
nd b
ring
s go
vern
men
ts, U
nite
d N
atio
ns a
genc
ies,
com
pani
es a
nd lo
cal
com
mun
ities
toge
ther
to d
evel
op a
nd im
plem
ent p
olic
y, la
ws
and
best
pra
ctic
e. I
UC
N
is th
e w
orld
’s o
ldes
t and
larg
est g
loba
l env
iron
men
tal n
etw
ork—
a de
moc
ratic
m
embe
rshi
p un
ion
with
mor
e th
an 1
,000
gov
ernm
ent a
nd N
GO
mem
ber
orga
niza
-tio
ns, a
nd a
lmos
t 11,
000
volu
ntee
r sc
ient
ists
in m
ore
than
160
cou
ntri
es
23.
The
Wild
life
Soci
ety
(TW
SI),
Bet
heds
a,
Mar
ylan
d It
is a
n in
tern
atio
nal n
on-p
ro fi t
sci
enti fi
c an
d ed
ucat
iona
l ass
ocia
tion
dedi
cate
d to
ex
celle
nce
in w
ildlif
e st
ewar
dshi
p th
roug
h sc
ienc
e an
d ed
ucat
ion
in N
orth
Am
eric
a by
ad
vanc
ing
the
scie
nce
of w
ildlif
e m
anag
emen
t, pr
omot
ing
cont
inui
ng e
duca
tion
of
wild
life
prof
essi
onal
s, a
nd a
dvoc
atin
g fo
r so
und,
sci
ence
-bas
ed w
ildlif
e po
licy.
The
or
gani
zatio
n al
so e
ncou
rage
s pr
ofes
sion
al g
row
th th
roug
h ce
rti fi
catio
n, p
eer-
revi
ewed
pu
blic
atio
ns, c
onfe
renc
es, a
nd w
orki
ng g
roup
s
(con
tinue
d)
490 Appendices
S. N
o.
Nam
e of
the
Org
aniz
atio
n A
ims
and
obje
ctiv
es
24.
TR
AFF
IC—
The
Wild
life
Tra
de M
onito
ring
N
etw
ork
It w
orks
to e
nsur
e th
at tr
ade
in w
ild p
lant
s an
d an
imal
s is
not
a th
reat
to th
e co
nser
vatio
n of
nat
ure.
TR
AFF
IC is
gov
erne
d by
the
TR
AFF
IC C
omm
ittee
, a s
teer
ing
grou
p co
mpo
sed
of m
embe
rs o
f T
RA
FFIC
’s p
artn
er o
rgan
izat
ions
, WW
F an
d IU
CN
25
. U
nite
d N
atio
ns E
nvir
onm
ent P
rogr
am (
UN
EP)
To
pro
vide
lead
ersh
ip a
nd e
ncou
rage
par
tner
ship
in c
arin
g fo
r th
e en
viro
nmen
t by
insp
irin
g, in
form
ing,
and
ena
blin
g na
tions
and
peo
ple
to im
prov
e th
eir
qual
ity o
f lif
e w
ithou
t com
prom
isin
g on
fut
ure
gene
ratio
ns
26.
Wet
land
Int
erna
tiona
l, N
ethe
rlan
ds
Wet
land
Int
erna
tion
al is
a g
loba
l org
aniz
atio
n th
at w
orks
to s
usta
in a
nd r
esto
re
wet
land
s an
d th
eir
reso
urce
s fo
r pe
ople
and
bio
dive
rsit
y. I
t has
20
regi
onal
, na
tion
al o
r pr
ojec
t of fi
ces
27.
Wild
life
Pres
erva
tion
Soci
ety
of A
usta
ralia
(W
PSA
) It
wor
ks to
enc
oura
ge th
e pr
otec
tion
of, a
nd to
cul
tivat
e in
tere
st in
, the
Aus
tral
ian
fl ora
an
d fa
una.
The
WPS
A p
ublis
hes
a qu
arte
rly
mag
azin
e A
ustr
alia
n W
ildlif
e an
d op
erat
es a
24/
7 te
leph
one
wild
life
answ
erin
g se
rvic
e fo
r m
embe
rs
28.
Wild
life
Tru
st
It is
rec
ogni
zed
as a
wor
ldw
ide
auth
ority
in c
onse
rvat
ion
and
envi
ronm
ent,
havi
ng m
any
scie
nti fi
c br
eakt
hrou
ghs,
incl
udin
g di
scov
erin
g th
e or
igin
of
the
SAR
S vi
rus.
The
or
gani
zatio
n ha
s re
ceiv
ed p
rest
igio
us W
hitle
y aw
ards
oft
en c
alle
d th
e “G
reen
Osc
ars”
fo
r th
e gr
ound
brea
king
wor
k by
its
scie
nti fi
c te
ams.
Wild
life
Tru
st w
as n
amed
“B
est
Wild
life
Cha
rity
” by
Rea
der’
s D
iges
t in
2005
and
has
rec
eive
d th
e hi
ghes
t rat
ing
from
C
hari
ty N
avig
ator
, an
inde
pend
ent c
hari
ty e
valu
ator
29
. Z
oolo
gica
l Soc
iety
of
Lon
don
(ZSL
) Z
SL r
uns
cons
erva
tion
prog
ram
mes
in B
rita
in a
nd a
cros
s th
e w
orld
. The
con
serv
atio
n of
w
ild a
nim
als
and
thei
r na
tura
l hab
itats
with
the
help
of
loca
l com
mun
ities
is f
unda
-m
enta
l to
its m
issi
on. I
t als
o w
orks
with
maj
or n
atur
al r
esou
rce
indu
stri
es a
ssis
ting
in
biod
iver
sity
mon
itori
ng a
nd a
dvis
ing
on b
est p
ract
ices
App
endi
x 4
(con
tinue
d)
491Appendices S.
No.
N
ame
of th
e O
rgan
izat
ion
Aim
s an
d ob
ject
ives
Gov
ernm
ent O
rgan
izat
ions
in I
ndia
1.
T
he M
inis
try
of E
nvir
onm
ent &
For
ests
(M
oEF)
, G
over
nmen
t of
Indi
a M
oEF
is th
e no
dal a
genc
y in
the
adm
inis
trat
ive
stru
ctur
e of
the
cent
ral g
over
nmen
t for
the
plan
ning
, pro
mot
ion,
co-
ordi
natio
n an
d ov
erse
eing
the
impl
emen
tatio
n of
Ind
ia’s
en
viro
nmen
tal a
nd f
ores
try
polic
ies
and
prog
ram
mes
rel
ated
to c
onse
rvat
ion
of th
e co
untr
y’s
natu
ral r
esou
rces
incl
udin
g its
lake
s an
d ri
vers
, bio
dive
rsity
, for
ests
and
w
ildlif
e, e
nsur
ing
the
wel
fare
of
anim
als,
and
the
prev
entio
n an
d ab
atem
ent o
f po
llutio
n. I
t als
o se
rves
as
the
noda
l age
ncy
for
the
Uni
ted
Nat
ions
Env
iron
men
t Pr
ogra
mm
e (U
NE
P), S
outh
Asi
a C
o-op
erat
ive
Env
iron
men
t Pro
gram
me
(SA
CE
P),
Inte
rnat
iona
l Cen
tre
for
Inte
grat
ed M
ount
ain
Dev
elop
men
t (IC
IMO
D)
and
for
the
follo
w-u
p of
the
Uni
ted
Nat
ions
Con
fere
nce
on E
nvir
onm
ent a
nd D
evel
opm
ent
(UN
CE
D).
The
Min
istr
y is
als
o en
trus
ted
with
issu
es r
elat
ing
to m
ultil
ater
al b
odie
s su
ch a
s th
e C
omm
issi
on o
n Su
stai
nabl
e D
evel
opm
ent (
CSD
), G
loba
l Env
iron
men
t Fa
cilit
y (G
EF)
and
of
regi
onal
bod
ies
like
Eco
nom
ic a
nd S
ocia
l Cou
ncil
for
Asi
a an
d Pa
ci fi c
(E
SCA
P) a
nd S
outh
Asi
an A
ssoc
iatio
n fo
r R
egio
nal C
o-op
erat
ion
(SA
AR
C)
on m
atte
rs p
erta
inin
g to
the
envi
ronm
ent.
Wild
life
Div
isio
n in
the
min
istr
y is
re
spon
sibl
e to
pro
vide
fi na
ncia
l and
tech
nica
l ass
ista
nce
to th
e st
ate
gove
rnm
ent f
or
scie
nti fi
c m
anag
emen
t of
the
wild
life
reso
urce
s 2.
T
he Z
oolo
gica
l Sur
vey
of I
ndia
(Z
SI),
Kol
kata
, W
est B
enga
l It
is th
e on
ly ta
xono
mic
org
aniz
atio
n in
the
coun
try
invo
lved
in th
e st
udy
of a
ll ki
nds
of
anim
als
from
Pro
tozo
a to
Mam
mal
ia, o
ccur
ring
in a
ll po
ssib
le h
abita
ts f
rom
dee
pest
de
pth
of th
e oc
ean
to th
e pe
aks
of H
imal
aya
3.
Soci
ety
for
Prev
entio
n of
Cru
elty
to A
nim
als
(SPC
A),
New
Del
hi
Soci
ety
for
Prev
entio
n of
Cru
elty
to A
nim
als
was
est
ablis
hed
in e
very
sta
te v
ia th
e no
ti fi ca
tion
of th
e G
over
nmen
t of
Indi
a un
der
Prev
entio
n of
Cru
elty
to A
nim
als
Rul
es,
2000
, sub
-sec
tion
(1)
of s
ectio
n 38
of
the
Prev
entio
n of
Cru
elty
to A
nim
als
Act
, 196
0 (5
9 of
196
0), u
nder
the
Min
istr
y of
Soc
ial J
ustic
e an
d E
mpo
wer
men
t to
look
into
the
rela
ted
mat
ters
4.
T
iger
Tas
k Fo
rce
It w
as e
stab
lishe
d af
ter
the
infa
mou
s Sa
risk
a de
bacl
e on
the
Prim
e M
inis
ter’
s co
ncer
n. I
t or
gani
zed
four
con
sulta
ncie
s, tw
o in
Del
hi, f
or is
sues
rel
ated
to p
oach
ing
and
cons
erva
tion
and
met
hodo
logy
of
coun
ting
tiger
s, o
ne in
Nag
pur
whe
re tr
ibal
and
N
GO
s w
ork
toge
ther
, and
one
in B
anga
lore
for
sci
ence
and
res
earc
h
(con
tinue
d)
492 Appendices
S. N
o.
Nam
e of
the
Org
aniz
atio
n A
ims
and
obje
ctiv
es
5.
The
Ani
mal
Wel
fare
Boa
rd o
f In
dia
(AW
BI)
T
he fi
rst o
f its
kin
d to
be
esta
blis
hed
by a
ny g
over
nmen
t in
the
wor
ld A
WB
I w
as s
et u
p in
19
62, i
n ac
cord
ance
with
Sec
tion
4 of
the
Prev
entio
n of
Cru
elty
to A
nim
als
Act
s 19
60
(No.
59
of 1
960)
to k
eep
the
law
in f
orce
in I
ndia
for
the
prev
entio
n of
cru
elty
to
anim
als
unde
r co
nsta
nt s
tudy
and
to a
dvis
e th
e go
vern
men
t on
the
amen
dmen
ts to
be
unde
rtak
en in
any
suc
h la
w f
rom
tim
e to
tim
e.
6.
Indi
an B
oard
for
Wild
life
(IB
WL
) or
Nat
iona
l B
oard
of
Wild
life
The
IB
WL
is th
e ap
ex a
dvis
ory
body
und
er S
ectio
n 5-
A o
f th
e W
ildlif
e (P
rote
ctio
n) A
ct,
1972
, set
up
by th
e ce
ntra
l gov
ernm
ent t
o ca
ter
to th
e fi e
ld o
f w
ildlif
e co
nser
vatio
n in
th
e co
untr
y an
d is
hea
ded
by th
e Pr
ime
Min
iste
r of
Ind
ia. S
ome
reso
lutio
ns a
dopt
ed b
y th
e bo
ard
incl
ude
wild
life
and
fore
sts
shal
l be
decl
ared
pri
ority
sec
tors
, law
enf
orce
-m
ent f
or p
oach
ing,
illic
it tr
ade
in w
ildlif
e an
d w
ildlif
e pr
oduc
ts, d
estr
uctio
n of
the
habi
tat,
and
such
oth
er il
lega
l act
iviti
es, t
appi
ng th
e po
tent
ial i
n su
stai
nabl
e w
ildlif
e to
uris
m a
nd u
se o
f th
e re
venu
e ea
rned
7.
T
he W
ildlif
e C
rim
e C
ontr
ol B
urea
u It
has
bee
n co
nstit
uted
thro
ugh
amen
dmen
t of
the
Wild
life
(Pro
tect
ion)
Act
, 197
2 in
200
8.
The
pow
ers
and
func
tion
of th
e bu
reau
hav
e be
en d
e fi ne
d un
der
Sect
ion
38z
of th
e A
ct
8.
Nat
iona
l Tig
er C
onse
rvat
ion
Aut
hori
ty (
NT
CA
) It
is a
sta
tuto
ry a
utho
rity
with
lega
l bac
king
to e
nsur
e tig
er c
onse
rvat
ion.
On
the
basi
s of
th
e re
com
men
datio
ns o
f N
atio
nal W
ildlif
e B
oard
cha
ired
by
Prim
e M
inis
ter,
a ta
sk
forc
e w
as s
et u
p to
look
into
the
mat
ters
of
tiger
con
serv
atio
n al
ong
with
fun
ding
to
tiger
res
erve
s in
the
coun
try.
Con
side
ring
the
urge
ncy,
Pro
ject
Tig
er h
as b
een
conv
erte
d in
to N
atio
nal T
iger
Con
serv
atio
n A
utho
rity
(N
TC
A)
by m
akin
g pr
ovis
ion
in
the
Wild
life
Prot
ectio
n A
ct 1
972,
thro
ugh
an a
men
dmen
t in
the
year
200
6 9.
C
entr
al Z
oo A
utho
rity
(C
ZA
), I
ndia
(St
atut
ory
Bod
y un
der
the
Min
istr
y of
Env
iron
men
t and
Fo
rest
s, G
ovt.
of I
ndia
)
The
CZ
A p
rovi
des
cent
ral a
ssis
tanc
e to
var
ious
zoo
s to
ach
ieve
pre
scri
bed
stan
dard
s fo
r be
tter
upke
ep a
nd h
ealth
fac
ilitie
s to
zoo
ani
mal
s. O
ne o
f th
e im
port
ant a
chie
vem
ent
has
been
the
crea
tion
of 5
res
cue
faci
litie
s in
des
igna
ted
zoos
nam
ely
at V
enda
lur
(Tam
il N
adu)
, Ban
ergh
atta
(K
arna
taka
), V
isak
hapa
ttnam
, Tir
upat
i in
And
hra
Prad
esh
and
Nah
arga
rh in
Raj
asth
an. A
n im
port
ant p
roje
ct o
n cr
eatio
n of
labo
rato
ry f
or
cons
erva
tion
of e
ndan
gere
d sp
ecie
s in
col
labo
ratio
n w
ith C
entr
e fo
r C
ellu
lar
and
Mol
ecul
ar B
iolo
gy (
CC
MB
), D
epar
tmen
t of
Bio
tech
nolo
gy, G
over
nmen
t of
Indi
a an
d A
ndhr
a Pr
ades
h st
ate
gove
rnm
ent h
as a
lso
been
initi
ated
with
the
obje
ctiv
e of
de
velo
ping
ex-
situ
gen
e ba
nk o
f w
ild f
auna
App
endi
x 4
(con
tinue
d)
493Appendices S.
No.
N
ame
of th
e O
rgan
izat
ion
Aim
s an
d ob
ject
ives
10.
The
Nat
iona
l Bio
dive
rsity
Aut
hori
ty
Est
ablis
hed
by th
e G
over
nmen
t of
Indi
a to
reg
ulat
e, c
onse
rve
and
enco
urag
e su
stai
nabl
e us
e of
bio
-res
ourc
es o
f In
dia
thro
ugh
the
Bio
logi
cal D
iver
sity
Act
, 200
2. I
t rec
ords
the
biod
iver
sity
con
serv
atio
n ef
fort
s in
the
coun
try
to m
ark
the
Inte
rnat
iona
l Day
for
B
iolo
gica
l Div
ersi
ty a
nd in
form
s th
e C
onve
ntio
n on
Bio
logi
cal D
iver
sity
(C
BD
) 11
. In
dian
Cou
ncil
of F
ores
try
Res
earc
h an
d E
duca
tion
(IC
FRE
), D
ehra
Dun
, Uttr
akha
nd,
Indi
a
Con
stitu
ted
by th
e M
inis
try
of E
nvir
onm
ent a
nd F
ores
ts, G
over
nmen
t of
Indi
a, to
fo
rmul
ate,
org
aniz
e, d
irec
t and
man
age
fore
stry
res
earc
h; tr
ansf
er d
evel
oped
te
chno
logi
es to
sta
tes
and
othe
r ag
enci
es; a
nd im
part
for
estr
y ed
ucat
ion.
The
cou
ncil
has
8 R
esea
rch
Inst
itute
s an
d 4
Adv
ance
d C
entr
es in
dif
fere
nt p
arts
of
the
coun
try
to
cate
r to
the
rese
arch
nee
ds o
f di
ffer
ent b
io-g
eogr
aphi
cal r
egio
ns
12.
Env
iron
men
tal I
nfor
mat
ion
Syst
em (
EN
VIS
) C
entr
e T
he f
ocus
of
EN
VIS
sin
ce it
s in
cept
ion
has
been
on
prov
idin
g en
viro
nmen
tal i
nfor
mat
ion
to d
ecis
ion
mak
ers,
pol
icy
plan
ners
, sci
entis
ts a
nd e
ngin
eers
, res
earc
h w
orke
rs, e
tc. a
ll ov
er th
e co
untr
y. A
larg
e nu
mbe
r of
nod
es, k
now
n as
EN
VIS
Cen
ters
, hav
e be
en
esta
blis
hed
in th
e ne
twor
k to
cov
er th
e br
oad
subj
ect a
reas
of
envi
ronm
ent w
ith a
foc
al
poin
t in
the
Min
istr
y of
Env
iron
men
t & F
ores
ts. E
NV
IS d
ue to
its
com
preh
ensi
ve
netw
ork
has
been
des
igne
d as
the
Nat
iona
l Foc
al P
oint
(N
FP)
for
INFO
TE
RR
A, a
gl
obal
env
iron
men
tal i
nfor
mat
ion
netw
ork
of th
e U
NE
P. I
n or
der
to s
tren
gthe
n th
e in
form
atio
n ac
tiviti
es o
f th
e N
FP, E
NV
IS w
as d
esig
nate
d as
the
Reg
iona
l Ser
vice
C
entr
e (R
SC)
of I
NFO
TE
RR
A u
nder
UN
EP
in 1
985
for
the
Sout
h A
sia
Sub-
Reg
ion
coun
trie
s 13
. C
entr
e fo
r E
nvir
onm
enta
l Edu
catio
n (C
EE
) It
aim
s to
cre
ate
envi
ronm
enta
l aw
aren
ess
in th
e co
mm
uniti
es, c
ondu
ct w
ides
prea
d en
viro
nmen
tal e
duca
tion
and
trai
ning
pro
gram
mes
thro
ugh
a ve
ry v
ast n
etw
ork
Non
-Gov
ernm
ent O
rgan
izat
ions
1.
A
ssoc
iatio
n fo
r Sp
ecie
s C
onse
rvat
ion
in I
ndia
(A
SCI)
T
he o
rgan
izat
ion
is d
edic
ated
to g
ener
atin
g re
sour
ces
from
the
Indi
an c
omm
unity
, and
pr
ofes
sion
als
wor
king
ove
rsea
s to
ass
ist s
peci
fi c p
rote
cted
are
as u
nder
thre
at th
roug
h di
rect
fi na
ncia
l and
mat
eria
l hel
p, in
nova
tive
sche
mes
to in
volv
e lo
cal-
peop
le a
nd
appl
ied
rese
arch
to a
ddre
ss u
rgen
t man
agem
ent a
nd c
onse
rvat
ion
issu
es
2.
Bom
bay
Nat
ural
His
tory
Soc
iety
(B
NH
S),
Mum
bai,
Indi
a A
ims
to d
isse
min
ate
know
ledg
e of
fl or
a an
d fa
una
by m
eans
of
lect
ures
, fi el
d-tr
ips,
lit
erat
ure
and
expe
ditio
ns a
nd, t
o st
udy
wild
life
rela
ted
prob
lem
s an
d re
com
men
d m
anag
emen
t pla
ns to
con
serv
e w
ildlif
e an
d its
hab
itat.
It c
ondu
cts
fi eld
res
earc
h pr
ojec
ts o
n bi
rd m
igra
tion
and
stud
ies
on th
e m
ovem
ent a
nd p
opul
atio
n st
ruct
ure
of
Indi
an a
vifa
una
(con
tinue
d)
494 Appendices
S. N
o.
Nam
e of
the
Org
aniz
atio
n A
ims
and
obje
ctiv
es
3.
Cen
tre
for
Scie
nce
and
Env
iron
men
t (C
SE),
N
ew D
elhi
In
volv
ed in
res
earc
h, in
vest
igat
ive
and
educ
atio
nal w
ork
in th
e fi e
ld o
f po
llutio
n, f
ores
t, w
ildlif
e, la
nd a
nd w
ater
use
. Dow
n to
Ear
th—
a fo
rtni
ghtly
env
iron
men
t mag
azin
e;
Chi
ldre
n’s
mag
azin
e T
he G
obar
Tim
es; b
ooks
; rep
orts
; com
pute
r da
taba
se; a
udio
vi
sual
s, e
tc. p
rodu
ced
by th
e C
SE im
part
kno
wle
dge
abou
t env
iron
men
t 4.
C
entr
e fo
r W
ildlif
e St
udie
s (C
WS)
, Ben
galu
ru
It is
a n
on-p
ro fi t
able
cha
rita
ble
trus
t and
the
chie
f im
plem
enta
tion
part
ner
for
rese
arch
, co
nser
vatio
n an
d ca
paci
ty-b
uild
ing
proj
ects
sup
port
ed in
Ind
ia b
y th
e W
ildlif
e C
onse
rvat
ion
Soci
ety,
New
Yor
k. C
WS
is r
ecog
nize
d as
a s
cien
ti fi c
and
indu
stri
al
rese
arch
org
aniz
atio
n by
the
Min
istr
y of
Sci
ence
and
Tec
hnol
ogy,
Gov
ernm
ent o
f In
dia
5.
CPR
Env
iron
men
tal E
duca
tion
Cen
tre
or
C. P
. Ram
asw
ami A
iyar
Fou
ndat
ion
Prom
otes
env
iron
men
tal a
war
enes
s to
pro
duce
and
dis
sem
inat
e ba
sic
educ
atio
nal a
nd
refe
renc
e m
ater
ial o
n en
viro
nmen
t and
to ta
ke u
p en
viro
nmen
tal p
roje
cts.
It w
orks
in
the
fi eld
of
envi
ronm
enta
l edu
catio
n 6.
D
asho
li G
ram
Sw
araj
ya M
anda
l, G
opes
hwar
, C
ham
oli D
ist,
Utta
r Pr
ades
h It
aim
s to
enc
oura
ge f
ores
t con
serv
atio
n an
d th
e us
e of
for
est p
rodu
cts
for
self
em
ploy
men
t. T
he w
orld
fam
ous
“Chi
pko
Mov
emen
t” u
nder
the
lead
ersh
ip o
f M
r. Su
nder
lal B
ahug
una
was
spe
ar-h
eade
d by
this
org
aniz
atio
n. I
t giv
es a
gre
at d
eal o
f im
port
ance
to f
ores
t co
nser
vatio
n in
the
Him
alay
as
7.
Frie
ndic
oes,
Soc
iety
for
the
Era
dica
tion
of
Cru
elty
to A
nim
als,
New
Del
hi
Res
cue,
fee
d an
d m
edic
ate
all i
njur
ed, a
buse
d an
d ow
nerl
ess
anim
als
and
prom
ote
adop
tion
prog
ram
mes
for
them
. Hum
ane
educ
atio
n pr
ogra
mm
es f
or s
choo
ls a
nd s
lum
ar
eas,
ste
riliz
atio
n of
str
ay d
ogs;
run
ning
mob
ile c
linic
s in
slu
m a
reas
are
som
e ot
her
sign
i fi ca
nt o
bjec
tives
of
the
soci
ety
8.
Gan
dhi P
eace
Fou
ndat
ion-
Env
iron
men
t Cel
l, N
ew D
elhi
It
was
set
up
mai
nly
to p
rom
ote
the
envi
ronm
enta
l act
iviti
es o
f ru
ral d
evel
opm
ent
agen
cies
, to
diss
emin
ate
envi
ronm
enta
l inf
orm
atio
n th
roug
h pu
blic
atio
n of
up-
to-d
ate
repo
rts
on e
nvir
onm
enta
l iss
ues,
to o
rgan
ize
wor
ksho
ps a
nd s
emin
ars
for
envi
ronm
en-
tal e
xper
ts, p
olic
y-m
aker
s, in
divi
dual
s an
d or
gani
satio
ns w
orki
ng to
war
ds th
e en
viro
nmen
t 9.
G
loba
l Tig
er P
etro
l (G
TP)
G
TP
prov
ides
equ
ipm
ent s
uch
as b
inoc
ular
s, je
eps,
hig
h-sp
eed
patr
ol b
oats
, jun
gle
equi
pmen
t and
trai
ning
to c
o-op
erat
e in
loca
l pro
ject
s fo
r re
fore
stat
ion,
wat
er
cons
erva
tion,
alte
rnat
ive
agri
cultu
re a
nd e
nerg
y te
chno
logi
es th
at s
ave
frag
ile h
abita
t. G
TP
has
wor
ked
clos
ely
with
the
Ran
tham
bhor
e Fo
unda
tion
arou
nd th
e R
anth
ambh
ore
Nat
iona
l Par
k in
Raj
asth
an, i
n K
arna
taka
with
the
Inst
itute
of
Clim
bers
an
d N
atur
e L
over
s w
orki
ng in
and
aro
und
the
Sund
arba
ns T
iger
Res
erve
and
with
vi
llage
s in
and
aro
und
Sari
ska
Nat
iona
l Par
k
App
endi
x 4
(con
tinue
d)
495Appendices S.
No.
N
ame
of th
e O
rgan
izat
ion
Aim
s an
d ob
ject
ives
10.
Indi
an A
ssoc
iatio
n fo
r E
nvir
onm
enta
l M
anag
emen
t (IA
EM
), N
agpu
r, M
ahar
asht
ra
It a
ims
at e
duca
ting
peop
le o
n en
viro
nmen
t to
enco
urag
e co
nser
vatio
n an
d sp
read
en
viro
nmen
t rel
ated
kno
wle
dge
11.
“Jum
bo W
ildlif
e” F
und
The
Ani
l Kum
bhle
Fou
ndat
ion-
Jum
bo F
und
wor
ks f
or e
leph
ant c
onse
rvat
ion
prog
ram
mes
12
. K
alpa
vrik
sh, N
ew D
elhi
It
is a
citi
zens
act
ion
grou
p se
t up
to in
culc
ate
unde
rsta
ndin
g an
d co
ncer
n on
env
iron
men
-ta
l iss
ues,
esp
ecia
lly a
mon
g th
e yo
uth.
It a
lso
aim
s to
con
duct
res
earc
h in
env
iron
men
-ta
l pro
blem
s, to
cam
paig
n on
env
iron
men
tal i
ssue
s an
d to
evo
lve
a ho
listic
en
viro
nmen
tal p
ersp
ectiv
e. I
t im
part
s en
viro
nmen
tal e
duca
tion
in s
choo
ls a
nd c
olle
ges
by f
orm
ing
a ne
twor
k of
nat
ure
club
s, c
ondu
ctin
g bi
rd-w
atch
ing
expe
ditio
ns a
nd
natu
re tr
ails
and
has
als
o de
velo
ped
wor
kboo
ks f
or s
choo
l lev
el s
tude
nts
13.
“Nar
mad
a B
acha
o A
ndol
an”
(Sav
e N
arm
ada
Mov
emen
t) D
hule
, Mah
aras
htra
U
nder
the
lead
ersh
ip o
f M
s. M
edha
Pat
kar,
it ai
ms
mai
nly
to p
rote
st a
gain
st th
e co
nstr
uctio
n of
dam
s in
the
Nar
mad
a V
alle
y in
gen
eral
; str
uggl
ing
tow
ards
rig
ht to
in
form
atio
n an
d a
new
env
iron
men
tally
sus
tain
able
wat
er p
olic
y. I
t hel
ps th
e tr
ibal
get
a
subs
tant
ial s
hare
of
the
gove
rnm
ent’s
dev
elop
men
t sch
emes
/ser
vice
s an
d to
ena
ble
them
to u
nder
take
dev
elop
men
t act
iviti
es. T
he a
ctiv
ists
und
erta
ke s
urve
ys o
f th
e af
fect
ed v
illag
es a
nd p
rote
st a
gain
st la
nd a
nd f
ores
t iss
ues
and
gove
rnm
ent i
nter
fer-
ence
in th
is r
egar
d 14
. T
he W
ildlif
e R
esea
rch
and
Con
serv
atio
n T
rust
(W
RC
T),
Nila
mbu
r It
is a
non
-pro
fi t p
ublic
cha
rita
ble
trus
t. w
ith a
mis
sion
to c
onse
rve
fl ora
and
fau
na in
the
Indi
an s
ubco
ntin
ent t
hrou
gh fi
eld
rese
arch
and
con
serv
atio
n ac
tions
15
. T
rave
l Ope
rato
rs f
or T
iger
s (T
OFT
) T
his
is a
cam
paig
n or
igin
ally
set
up
by a
num
ber
of c
once
rned
Ind
ian
focu
sed
trav
el
oper
ator
s in
the
UK
but
its
mem
bers
hip
is o
n th
e ri
se f
rom
acr
oss
the
glob
e an
d In
dia
who
bel
ieve
in s
usta
inab
le w
ildlif
e to
uris
m le
adin
g to
con
serv
atio
n of
tige
rs th
roug
h co
llect
ive
actio
n an
d ad
here
nce
to r
espo
nsib
le g
uide
lines
and
Cod
es o
f C
ondu
ct
16. .
W
ildlif
e C
onse
rvat
ion
Soci
ety
(WC
S)
It s
aves
wild
life
and
land
s th
roug
h ca
refu
l sci
ence
, int
erna
tiona
l con
serv
atio
n, e
duca
tion
and
man
agem
ent o
f th
e w
orld
’s la
rges
t sys
tem
of
urba
n w
ildlif
e pa
rks
17. .
W
ildlif
e T
rust
of
Indi
a (W
TI)
It
is o
ne o
f th
e no
n-pr
o fi t k
ey o
rgan
izat
ion
com
mitt
ed to
con
serv
e na
ture
, esp
ecia
lly
enda
nger
ed s
peci
es a
nd th
reat
ened
hab
itats
, in
part
ners
hip
with
com
mun
ities
and
go
vern
men
t. T
he p
rinc
ipal
con
cern
s of
WT
I in
clud
e cr
isis
man
agem
ent a
nd p
rovi
sion
of
qui
ck, e
f fi ci
ent a
id to
indi
vidu
als,
spe
cies
or
habi
tats
that
req
uire
it th
e m
ost
(con
tinue
d)
496 Appendices
S. N
o.
Nam
e of
the
Org
aniz
atio
n A
ims
and
obje
ctiv
es
Gov
ernm
ent O
rgan
izat
ions
in R
ajas
than
1.
D
epar
tmen
t of
Fore
sts,
Gov
ernm
ent o
f R
ajas
than
, Jai
pur,
Raj
asth
an
Thi
s st
ate
depa
rtm
ent w
orks
for
the
cons
erva
tion
of it
s un
ique
her
itage
, ric
h cu
ltura
l and
et
hnic
al tr
aditi
ons
of c
onse
rvat
ion
of fl
oral
and
fau
nal d
iver
sity
and
gen
e po
ol r
eser
ves
thro
ugh
a ne
twor
k of
pro
tect
ed a
reas
alo
ng w
ith c
onse
rvat
ion
of r
are
and
enda
nger
ed
spec
ies
of fl
ora
and
faun
a by
und
erta
king
in-s
itu a
nd e
x-si
tu c
onse
rvat
ion
mea
sure
s an
d es
tabl
ishi
ng li
nkag
es w
ith th
e na
tura
l hab
itats
of
the
spec
ies
for
thei
r re
habi
litat
ion
2.
The
Raj
asth
an S
tate
Pol
lutio
n C
ontr
ol B
oard
, Ja
ipur
, Raj
asth
an
It is
a b
ody
corp
orat
e co
nstit
uted
und
er s
ectio
n 4
of th
e W
ater
and
Air
(Pr
even
tion
and
Con
trol
of
Pollu
tion)
Act
, 197
4 en
trus
ted
with
the
resp
onsi
bilit
ies
of p
reve
ntio
n, c
ontr
ol
and
abat
emen
t of
air
and
wat
er p
ollu
tion.
Wat
er C
ess
Act
, 197
7 ha
s be
en e
nact
ed to
m
ake
the
Stat
e B
oard
fi na
ncia
lly in
depe
nden
t 3.
T
he E
nvir
onm
enta
l Inf
orm
atio
n Sy
stem
(E
NV
IS)
Cen
tre,
Raj
asth
an (
RA
JEN
VIS
) E
NV
IS C
entr
e at
Raj
asth
an S
tate
Pol
lutio
n C
ontr
ol B
oard
, Jai
pur
has
been
est
ablis
hed
unde
r th
e E
NV
IS—
proj
ect o
f th
e M
inis
try
of E
nvir
onm
enta
l and
For
est,
Gov
ernm
ent
of I
ndia
to f
acili
tate
gen
erat
ion
and
diss
emin
atio
n of
info
rmat
ion
on v
ario
us f
acet
s of
th
e en
viro
nmen
t of
Raj
asth
an
4.
Cen
tre
for
Env
iron
men
t Edu
catio
n (C
EE
),
Raj
asth
an
CE
E in
Jai
pur
and
Jodh
pur
wer
e cr
eate
d in
rec
ogni
tion
of th
e im
port
ance
of
envi
ronm
en-
tal e
duca
tion
in I
ndia
’s o
vera
ll en
viro
nmen
t and
dev
elop
men
t str
ateg
y. T
he r
esul
t of
a un
ique
par
tner
ship
bet
wee
n go
vern
men
t and
a n
on-g
over
nmen
tal i
nstit
utio
n, C
EE
was
es
tabl
ishe
d as
a C
entr
e of
Exc
elle
nce
in 1
984,
sup
port
ed b
y M
oEF.
Nat
iona
l E
nvir
onm
ent E
duca
tion
Prog
ram
me
for
Scho
ols
(NE
EPS
), E
nvir
onm
ent o
rien
tatio
n th
roug
h Sc
hool
Edu
catio
n (E
OSE
), S
mal
l Gra
nts
Prog
ram
me
(SG
P), N
atio
nal G
reen
C
orps
(N
GC
) ar
e so
me
of th
e m
ajor
pro
gram
mes
und
erta
ken
by th
e ce
ntre
5.
D
eser
t Reg
iona
l Cen
tre
(DR
C),
Zoo
logi
cal
Surv
ey o
f In
dia
(ZSI
), J
odhp
ur, R
ajas
than
A
Reg
iona
l Cen
tre
of th
e Z
SI, a
t Jod
hpur
was
est
ablis
hed
in J
une,
196
0 un
der
the
then
Se
cond
Fiv
e Y
ear
Plan
to s
urve
y th
e fa
unal
div
ersi
ty o
f D
eser
t Bio
me
6.
Cen
tral
Ari
d Z
one
Res
earc
h In
stitu
te
(CA
ZR
I),J
odhp
ur, R
ajas
than
To
arr
est t
he d
eser
ti fi ca
tion
proc
ess
and
for
scie
nti fi
c an
d su
stai
nabl
e m
anag
emen
t of
the
reso
urce
s, D
eser
t Aff
ores
tatio
n St
atio
n w
as e
stab
lishe
d at
Jod
hpur
whi
ch w
as fi
nally
up
grad
ed to
CA
ZR
I un
der
Indi
an C
ounc
il of
Agr
icul
tura
l Res
earc
h (I
CA
R),
N
ew D
elhi
. The
CA
ZR
I op
erat
es th
roug
h he
adqu
arte
r at
Jod
hpur
and
bra
nche
s in
sev
en
divi
sion
s fo
r th
e re
spec
tive
agro
-clim
atic
zon
e to
wor
k on
loca
tion-
spec
i fi c
prob
lem
s 7.
D
eser
t Med
icin
e R
esea
rch
Cen
tre
(DM
RC
),
Jodh
pur,
Raj
asth
an
It is
one
of
the
perm
anen
t ins
titut
es o
f In
dian
Cou
ncil
of M
edic
al R
esea
rch
(IC
MR
), th
e ap
ex a
uton
omou
s bo
dy in
bio
med
ical
res
earc
h un
der
the
Min
istr
y of
Hea
lth a
nd
Fam
ily w
elfa
re, G
over
nmen
t of
Indi
a. T
his
cent
re is
par
ticul
arly
wor
king
on
hem
atop
hago
us in
sect
s an
d re
late
d di
seas
es
App
endi
x 4
(con
tinue
d)
497Appendices S.
No.
N
ame
of th
e O
rgan
izat
ion
Aim
s an
d ob
ject
ives
8.
Res
cue
Cen
tre
at N
ahar
garh
Bio
logi
cal P
ark,
Ja
ipur
, Raj
asth
an, I
ndia
O
ne o
f th
e 5
Res
cue
Cen
tres
in th
e co
untr
y es
tabl
ishe
d by
on
the
Cen
tral
Zoo
Aut
hori
ty
(CZ
A)
of I
ndia
aft
er th
e In
dian
Gov
ernm
ent p
asse
d a
law
to b
an o
n th
e us
e of
cer
tain
an
imal
s lik
e lio
n, ti
ger,
pant
her,
bear
and
mon
key
for
ente
rtai
nmen
t pur
pose
spe
cial
ly
in c
ircu
s. I
ts n
ot a
tour
ist s
pot o
r a
zoo
and
visi
tors
are
not
allo
wed
9.
St
ate
Bio
dive
rsity
Boa
rd
Form
ed u
nder
Bio
logi
cal D
iver
sity
Act
, 200
2, a
com
mitt
ees
of fi
ve e
x of
fi cio
mem
bers
ap
poin
ted
by th
e st
ate
gove
rnm
ent w
hich
in c
onsu
ltatio
n w
ith th
e lo
cal b
odie
s co
ncer
ned
and
by o
rder
, pro
hibi
t or
rest
rict
det
rim
enta
l act
ivity
aga
inst
con
serv
atio
n an
d su
stai
nabl
e us
e of
bio
dive
rsity
. 10
. T
he S
tate
Wild
life
Adv
isor
y B
oard
It
is a
sta
tuto
ry b
ody
form
ed u
nder
Wild
life
(pro
tect
ion)
Act
, 197
2 un
der
the
chai
rman
ship
of
the
Chi
ef M
inis
ter
whi
le th
e Fo
rest
Min
iste
r is
the
Vic
e-C
hair
pers
on. T
he b
oard
m
ust m
eet t
wic
e ye
arly
to a
dvis
e th
e st
ate
gove
rnm
ent o
n w
ildlif
e co
nser
vatio
n m
atte
rs
Non
-Gov
ernm
ent O
rgan
izat
ions
(N
GO
s) in
Raj
asth
an
1.
God
awan
Soc
iety
, Jod
hpur
W
orks
mai
nly
for
the
cons
erva
tion
of b
usta
rds
espe
cial
ly, t
he G
reat
Ind
ian
Bus
tard
2.
H
adou
ti N
atur
alis
ts S
ocie
ty, K
ota
Wor
ks in
the
Had
oti r
egio
n of
Raj
asth
an to
war
ds b
iodi
vers
ity c
onse
rvat
ion
issu
es
3 N
atur
e C
lub
of R
ajas
than
, Jai
pur
Wor
ks to
war
ds b
iodi
vers
ity c
onse
rvat
ion
and
crea
ting
awar
enes
s in
you
ngst
ers
and
loca
ls,
popu
lari
zatio
n of
con
serv
atio
n pr
ogra
ms
and
envi
ronm
ent e
duca
tion
4.
Raj
asth
an E
nvir
onm
ent P
rese
rvat
ion
Soci
ety,
Ja
ipur
W
orks
tow
ards
pol
lutio
n co
ntro
l, af
fore
stat
ion,
eco
logi
cal a
nd e
nvir
onm
enta
l pre
serv
atio
n.
It p
rom
otes
soc
ial f
ores
try
and
plan
tatio
n, c
lean
ing
of p
onds
, lak
es a
nd r
eser
voir
s. I
t al
so im
part
s en
viro
nmen
tal e
duca
tion
and
awar
enes
s, p
rovi
de c
onsu
ltanc
y an
d en
cour
age
the
use
of r
enew
able
sou
rces
of
ener
gy
5.
Rev
olut
iona
ry A
ctio
n C
onse
rvat
ion
Soci
ety
for
Hel
ping
Ani
mal
s (R
AK
SHA
), J
aipu
r It
is a
you
th b
ased
act
ivis
t gro
up w
orki
ng f
or a
nim
al r
ight
s an
d w
elfa
re b
y pr
otec
ting
all
anim
als
from
abu
se s
uch
as b
eatin
g, il
l-tr
eatm
ent,
capt
ivity
, and
ove
r-lo
adin
g an
d ag
ains
t all
kind
s of
cru
elty
. The
mai
n pr
ojec
ts a
re 2
4 h
Snak
e H
elpl
ine,
ado
ptio
n of
st
ray
dogs
, rai
ds o
n ch
arm
ers,
cir
cuse
s, c
aged
bir
ds a
nd a
mic
able
hum
an–a
nim
al
con fl
ict s
olut
ion.
6.
Si
ddha
rtha
Sin
gh N
atur
al H
isto
ry T
rust
, Jai
pur
Foun
ded
by la
te M
r. Sh
anta
nu K
umar
, a w
ildlif
er a
nd th
e th
en D
irec
tor-
Gen
eral
of
Raj
asth
an P
olic
e, it
pro
vide
s su
ppor
t tow
ards
wild
life
cons
erva
tion.
It h
as a
hug
e lib
rary
with
hun
dred
s of
rar
e bo
oks,
mon
ogra
phs
and
pict
ures
498 Appendices
App
endi
x 5
Maj
or in
tern
atio
nal c
onve
ntio
ns f
or g
loba
l bio
dive
rsity
con
serv
atio
n an
d pr
otec
tion
of w
ildlif
e an
d na
tura
l res
ourc
es
1.
The
Con
vent
ion
on
Bio
logi
cal D
iver
sity
(C
BD
)
Sign
ed b
y 15
0 go
vern
men
t lea
ders
at t
he 1
992
Rio
Ear
th S
umm
it, th
e C
onve
ntio
n on
Bio
logi
cal D
iver
sity
is
dedi
cate
d to
pro
mot
ing
sust
aina
ble
deve
lopm
ent.
Con
ceiv
ed a
s a
prac
tical
tool
for
tran
slat
ing
the
prin
cipl
es o
f A
gend
a 21
into
rea
lity.
The
con
vent
ion
reco
gniz
es th
at, b
iolo
gica
l div
ersi
ty is
rel
ated
mor
e w
ith p
eopl
e an
d th
eir
need
for
foo
d se
curi
ty, m
edic
ines
, fre
sh a
ir a
nd w
ater
, she
lter
and
a cl
ean
and
heal
thy
envi
ronm
ent,
than
pl
ants
, ani
mal
s an
d m
icro
orga
nism
s an
d th
eir
ecos
yste
ms.
The
CB
D w
hich
now
has
193
mem
ber
part
ies,
en
tere
d in
to f
orce
on
29 D
ecem
ber,
1993
2.
T
he C
onve
ntio
n on
In
tern
atio
nal T
rade
in
End
ange
red
Spec
ies
of
Wild
Fau
na a
nd F
lora
(C
ITE
S)
It is
an
inte
rnat
iona
l agr
eem
ent b
etw
een
gove
rnm
ents
. Its
aim
is to
ens
ure
that
inte
rnat
iona
l tra
de in
spe
cim
ens
of
wild
ani
mal
s an
d pl
ants
doe
s no
t thr
eate
n th
eir
surv
ival
and
to s
afeg
uard
cer
tain
spe
cies
fro
m o
ver-
expl
oita
tion.
Toda
y, it
acc
ords
var
ying
deg
rees
of
prot
ectio
n to
mor
e th
an 3
0,00
0 sp
ecie
s of
ani
mal
s an
d pl
ants
, whe
ther
th
ey a
re tr
aded
as
live
spec
imen
s, f
ur c
oats
or
drie
d he
rbs
3.
Uni
ted
Nat
ions
Con
vent
ion
to C
omba
t D
eser
ti fi ca
tion
(UN
CC
D)
In 1
977,
the
Uni
ted
Nat
ions
Con
fere
nce
on D
eser
ti fi ca
tion
(UN
CO
D)
adop
ted
a Pl
an o
f A
ctio
n to
Com
bat
Des
erti fi
catio
n (P
AC
D).
The
Uni
ted
Nat
ions
Env
iron
men
t Pro
gram
me
(UN
EP)
con
clud
ed in
199
1 th
at th
e pr
oble
m o
f la
nd d
egra
datio
n in
ari
d, s
emi-
arid
and
dry
sub
-hum
id a
reas
had
inte
nsi fi
ed, a
lthou
gh th
ere
wer
e “l
ocal
exa
mpl
es o
f su
cces
s”. A
s a
resu
lt, th
e qu
estio
n of
how
to ta
ckle
des
erti fi
catio
n w
as s
till a
maj
or c
once
rn
at th
e U
nite
d N
atio
ns C
onfe
renc
e on
Env
iron
men
t and
Dev
elop
men
t (U
NC
ED
), h
eld
in R
io d
e Ja
neir
o in
199
2.
The
Con
fere
nce
supp
orte
d a
new
, int
egra
ted
appr
oach
to th
e pr
oble
m, e
mph
asiz
ing
actio
n to
pro
mot
e su
stai
nabl
e de
velo
pmen
t at t
he c
omm
unity
leve
l. It
als
o ca
lled
on th
e U
nite
d N
atio
ns G
ener
al A
ssem
bly
to
esta
blis
h an
Int
ergo
vern
men
tal N
egot
iatin
g C
omm
ittee
to p
repa
re, b
y Ju
ne 1
994,
a C
onve
ntio
n to
Com
bat
Des
ertifi
cat
ion,
par
ticul
arly
in A
fric
a. I
n D
ecem
ber
1992
, the
Gen
eral
Ass
embl
y ag
reed
and
ado
pted
re
solu
tion
47/1
88
4.
Con
vent
ion
on M
igra
tory
Sp
ecie
s (C
MS)
T
he C
onve
ntio
n on
the
Con
serv
atio
n of
Mig
rato
ry S
peci
es o
f W
ild A
nim
als
(als
o kn
own
as C
MS
or B
onn
Con
vent
ion)
aim
s to
con
serv
e te
rres
tria
l, m
arin
e an
d av
ian
mig
rato
ry s
peci
es th
roug
hout
thei
r ra
nge.
It i
s an
in
terg
over
nmen
tal t
reat
y, c
oncl
uded
und
er th
e U
NE
P, c
once
rned
with
the
cons
erva
tion
of w
ildlif
e an
d ha
bita
ts
on a
glo
bal s
cale
. Sin
ce th
e C
onve
ntio
n’s
entr
y in
to f
orce
, its
mem
bers
hip
has
grow
n st
eadi
ly to
incl
ude
114
(as
of 1
Oct
ober
201
0) P
artie
s fr
om A
fric
a, C
entr
al a
nd S
outh
Am
eric
a, A
sia,
Eur
ope
and
Oce
ania
. As
the
only
gl
obal
con
vent
ion
spec
ializ
ing
in th
e co
nser
vatio
n of
mig
rato
ry s
peci
es, t
heir
hab
itats
and
mig
ratio
n ro
utes
, C
MS
com
plem
ents
and
co-
oper
ates
with
a n
umbe
r of
oth
er in
tern
atio
nal o
rgan
izat
ions
, NG
Os
and
part
ners
in
the
med
ia a
s w
ell a
s in
the
corp
orat
e se
ctor
App
endi
x 5
499Appendices
5.
The
Con
vent
ion
on
Wet
land
s of
In
tern
atio
nal
Impo
rtan
ce o
r T
he
Ram
sar
Con
vent
ion
The
Ram
sar
Con
vent
ion
is a
n in
terg
over
nmen
tal t
reat
y th
at p
rovi
des
the
fram
ewor
k fo
r na
tiona
l act
ion
and
inte
rnat
iona
l coo
pera
tion
for
the
cons
erva
tion
and
wis
e us
e of
wet
land
s an
d th
eir
reso
urce
s am
ongs
t the
m
embe
r co
untr
ies.
The
Ram
sar
Con
vent
ion
is th
e on
ly g
loba
l env
iron
men
tal t
reat
y th
at d
eals
with
a p
artic
ular
ec
osys
tem
, and
the
Con
vent
ion’
s m
embe
r co
untr
ies
cove
r al
l geo
grap
hic
regi
ons
of th
e pl
anet
. The
Con
vent
ion
uses
a b
road
de fi
nitio
n of
the
type
s of
wet
land
s co
vere
d in
its
mis
sion
, inc
ludi
ng la
kes
and
rive
rs, s
wam
ps a
nd
mar
shes
, wet
gra
ssla
nds
and
peat
land
s, o
ases
, est
uari
es, d
elta
s an
d tid
al fl
ats,
nea
r-sh
ore
mar
ine
area
s,
man
grov
es a
nd c
oral
ree
fs, a
nd h
uman
-mad
e si
tes
such
as
fi sh
pond
s, r
ice
padd
ies,
res
ervo
irs,
and
sal
t pan
s 6.
T
he C
onve
ntio
n on
the
Con
serv
atio
n of
A
ntar
ctic
Mar
ine
Liv
ing
Res
ourc
es
(CC
AM
LR
)
It c
ame
into
for
ce in
198
2, a
s pa
rt o
f th
e A
ntar
ctic
Tre
aty
Syst
em, i
n pu
rsua
nce
of th
e pr
ovis
ions
of
Art
icle
IX
of
the
trea
ty. I
t was
est
ablis
hed
mai
nly
in r
espo
nse
to c
once
rns
that
an
incr
ease
in k
rill
catc
hes
in th
e So
uthe
rn
Oce
an c
ould
hav
e a
seri
ous
effe
ct o
n th
eir
popu
latio
n an
d ot
her
mar
ine
life,
par
ticul
arly
on
bird
s, s
eals
and
fi sh
, w
hich
mai
nly
depe
nd o
n kr
ill f
or f
ood.
A “
prec
autio
nary
” ap
proa
ch h
as b
een
impl
emen
ted
to m
inim
ise
risk
as
soci
ated
with
uns
usta
inab
le p
ract
ices
in c
ondi
tions
of
unce
rtai
nty.
Thi
s ap
proa
ch is
com
plem
ente
d by
the
need
to ta
ke in
to a
ccou
nt e
colo
gica
l lin
ks b
etw
een
spec
ies
and
“nat
ural
” va
riab
ility
as
oppo
sed
to “
hum
an-
indu
ced”
var
iabi
lity
or th
e “e
cosy
stem
app
roac
h”. C
onse
rvat
ion
mea
sure
s ad
opte
d by
CC
AM
LR
are
bas
ed o
n sc
ient
i fi c
advi
ce a
nd r
equi
re e
nfor
cem
ent t
o be
eff
ectiv
e 7.
T
he C
onve
ntio
n C
once
rnin
g th
e Pr
otec
tion
of th
e W
orld
’s C
ultu
ral a
nd
Nat
ural
Her
itage
The
Wor
ld H
erita
ge C
onve
ntio
n is
a s
ucce
ssfu
l glo
bal i
nstr
umen
t for
the
prot
ectio
n of
cul
tura
l and
nat
ural
her
itage
. It
was
ado
pted
by
the
Uni
ted
Nat
ions
Edu
catio
nal,
Scie
nti fi
c an
d C
ultu
ral O
rgan
izat
ion
(UN
ESC
O)
Gen
eral
C
onfe
renc
e at
its
17th
ses
sion
in P
aris
on
16 N
ovem
ber
1972
. In
Aug
ust 1
974,
Aus
tral
ia b
ecam
e on
e of
the
fi rst
co
untr
ies
to r
atif
y th
e C
onve
ntio
n. I
t aim
s to
pro
mot
e co
oper
atio
n am
ong
natio
ns to
pro
tect
her
itage
aro
und
the
wor
ld th
at is
of
such
out
stan
ding
uni
vers
al v
alue
that
its
cons
erva
tion
is im
port
ant f
or c
urre
nt a
nd f
utur
e ge
nera
tions
. It i
s in
tend
ed th
at, u
nlik
e th
e se
ven
won
ders
of
the
anci
ent w
orld
, pro
pert
ies
on th
e W
orld
Her
itage
L
ist w
ill b
e co
nser
ved
for
all t
ime.
The
Con
vent
ion
cam
e in
to f
orce
in 1
975
500 Appendices
Appendix 6 Database information systems on biodiversity conservation and management
• Amphibian Species of the World http://www.research.amnh.org/herpetology/amphibia/ • Biodiversity Action Network (BIONET) http://www.bionet-us.org • Biodiversity and Biological Collections http://www.biodiversity.uconn.edu/BRC.html • Biodiversity Conservation Information System (BCIS) http://www.bcis.ch/ • Biodiversity Support Program (BSP) www.bcnet.org/links.htm • Biodiversity-World Resources Institute http://www.wri.org/ • Biological Resources Research Center (BRRC) www.brc.a-star.edu.sg/ • Biology Abstracts and Zoological Records (BIOSIS) http://www.york.biosis.org/ • BIOSIS: Publisher of Biological Abstracts and Zoological Record http://www.biosis.org/ • Birds of Prey Foundation www.birds-of-prey.org/ • Centre for Conservation Biology Network (CCBN) www.allacronyms.com/CCBN/
Center_for_Conservation_Biology_Network/ • Centre for Marine Conservation http://www.cmc-ocean.org/ • Eco-Directory (EcoDir) http://www.rec.hu/ • Ecological Monitoring and Assessment Network (EMAN) http://www.cciw.ca/ • Envirolink’s Endangered Species Act On-Line Resource Guide http://www.envirolink.org/ • ETI-Expert Center for Taxonomic Identi fi cation, Amsterdam http://wwweti.eti.bio.uva.nl/ • Expert Centre for Taxonomic Identi fi cation www.eti.uva.nl/ • FAOSTAT Forestry Statistics Database at FAO faostat.fao.org/site/630/default.aspx • GEF Global Environment Facility www.thegef.org/ • Global Change Data and Information System (GCDIS) www.globalchange.gov. • Global Land Cover Data for Biodiversity Analysis http://www.conservation.org/ • Global Observation of Forest Cover (GOFC) www.fao.org/gtos/gofc-gold/ • Global Terrestrial Observing System (GTOS) http://www.fao.org/ • GRID The Global Resource Information Database UNEP http://www.unep.org/ • Integrated Conservation Networking System (ICONS) http://www.iucn.org/ • International Centre for Antarctic Information and Research www.allacronyms.com/.../
International_Centre_for_Antarctic_Information • IUCN Flamingo Specialist Group. Flamingo , Bulletin of the IUCNSSC www.wetlands.
org/.../Networkofspecialists/FlamingoSpecialistGroup/Flamingo Bulletin/issue... • IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals www.iucnredlist.org/ • Mammal Species of the World: Smithsonian Institute http://nmnhgoph.si.edu/ • Man and Biosphere Species Database http://ice.ucdavis.edu/ • Man and the Biosphere http://www.unesco.org/ • Woods Hole Research Centre http://www.whrc.org/ • MUSE Fish Databases www.mcz.harvard.edu/Departments/Ichthyology/researchcoll.html • Natural History Museums and Collections (World wide) www.lib.washington.edu/Sla/
natmus.html • System-Wide Information Network for Genetic Resources data.gbif.org/datasets/
resource/1430 • Taxonomic Database Working Group http://plants.usda.gov ./ • The Biodiversity Forum (Bio-Forum) http://www.worldcorp.com/ • The Interagency Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) www.itis.gov/ • The Internet Biodiversity Service www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/ibc99/iopaleo/
default.htm
(continued)
Appendix 6
501Appendices
• The Nature Conservancy http://www.tnc.org/ • The Virtual Library of Ecology and Biodiversity (VLEB) http://conbio.rice.edu/ • The World Species List (WSL) worldwildlife.org/species/directory?sort=extinction_
status&direction... • TREE BASE: A Database of Phylogenetic knowledge www.treebase.org/ • United Nations List of National Parks and Protected Areas www.unep-wcmc.org • United State Global Change Research Program http://www.usgcrp.gov ./ • Virus databases on-line www.antiviralintelistrat.com/1/abbreviations • WCMC Protected Areas Virtual Library (PAVL) http://www.wcmc.org.uk/ • Wildlife Crime Database http://www.wpsi-india.org/wpsi/index.php • World Bank Monitoring Environmental Progress Database www.ciesin.org/lqi-is/guides/
mep.html • World Conservation Monitoring Centre (WCMC) http://www.wcmc.org.uk/ • World Data Center On Micro-organisms www.wdcm.org/ • World Information and Early Warning System on Plant Genetic Resources (WIEWS) apps3.
fao.org/wiews/ • World Map: Measuring the Variety of Nature http://www.nhm.ac.uk/ • World Pollen Database www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/gpd.html • World Resources Institute (WRI) http://www.wri.org/ • World Weeds Database www.issg.org/database/reference/index.asp • World Wetlands Network (WWN) worldwetnet.org
Appendix 6 (continued)
503
Glossary
Bhagavata Puran The great epic focused on Bhakti (religious devotion) to the incarnations of Lord Vishnu particularly Lord Krishna. Lord Vishnu is the protector or the preserver God as per Hindu mythology
Bharatvarsha An older Hindi name for India Bherudeo The small deity who protects the Goddess Durga as per Hindu mythology. Bittern Concentrated salty water left in the salt pans following crystallization of
sodium chloride Brahma The Creator God as per Hindu mythology Brine Salty water Chabutara The open platform at the front of a house of olden times generally
meant for feeding birds or social gatherings Danda A wooden stick Darbar A king’s administrative offi ce Dev bani God’s grove Dev van or banis Patches of forests devoted to the God or a deity Dussehra A major Indian festival which marks the victory of good over evil and is
celebrated by burning the effi gies of Ravana, the demon king of Sri Lanka and his brothers. Lord Rama fought with the Ravana who had abducted his wife. The famous epic Ramayana based on the life of Lord Rama aptly describes the fi ght
Gauchar A wasteland near the village used for cattle grazing Ghara An earthen pot for securing drinking water Ghee Clarifi ed butter made of cow or buffalo milk Gramsabha Village assembly J&K Jammu and Kashmir Jag The world Jagirdar The owner of a large estate or landlord Jheel A natural or man-made water reservoir or lake Johads Traditional check dams Kakar banis Forests marking the boundary between two villages often sanctifi ed
by religious belief
B.K. Sharma et al. (eds.), Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India: Conservation and Management of Vertebrates, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-01345-9, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2013
504
Keoladeo Another name of “Lord Shiva”—the destructor God as per Hindu mythology
Khus Vetiveria zizanoides Kraunch Sarus Crane Kulhadi bandh panchayat Local rule banning cutting of green trees and the use
of axes Kuraj Sanrakshan Vikas Sansthan Demioselle Crane Conservation Develop-
ment Institute Kyar A salt pan Loksabha The lower house of Indian Parliament Mandir A temple Mawa Boiled and condensed milk used for making traditional Indian sweet dishes Murraam A layer beneath the sand which does not let the surface water go
underground Orans Sacred pastures or sparse woodlands protecting faunal and fl oral species of
the region Parvat A hill Pathar The rocky area Rajput The warrior clan from Rajasthan Reshta Salt The fi ne salt deposited at the edges of salt pans due to wind action Rishi The spiritual teacher who taught vedas to princes in traditional schools Sansad Parliament Shamlat The joint Government of Jaipur and Jodhpur which owned Sambhar Salt
Lake during the Mughal Period Shikarbadis Private hunting reserves of the erstwhile kings Shukracharya Royal priest of the demon king as per Hindu mythology Uparmal A high tableland Vidis Grasslands near villages Visual Encounter Survey (VES) A survey conducted by observers walking
through a designated area for a prescribed time, visually searching in a systematic way while noting down the animals encountered along with the time elapsed
Vrikshmitra A friend of trees
Glossary
505
Further Readings
AFRI (2002) Proceeding of a workshop on Development of suitable strategy for rehabilitation of Orans and Gauchars in Rajasthan, organized by Silviculture division, AFRI, Jodhpur, 16–17 April, Director (Ed.), Arid Forest Research Institute (AFRI), Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India, p 125
Agrawal SK (2002) Biodiversity: Strategies for conservation (commemoration vol.) In: Dadhich LK, Sharma LK (eds). APH Publishers, New Delhi, India, p 356
Alfred JRB, Ramakrishna, Pradhan MS (2006) Validation of threatened mammals of India, Director (Ed.), Zoological Survey of India (ZSI). Government Press, Kolkata, India, p 568
Anne R, Kathleen P, Snodgrass JG, Delcore HD, Sherman R (2010) Indigenous people and the collaborative stewardship of nature: Knowledge binds and institutional confl icts. Left Coast Press, CA, USA, p 320
Boitani L, Fuller TK (1995)) Research techniques in animal ecology: Controversies and conse-quences, vol 1&2. Eastern Books Corporation, New Delhi, India, p 442
Chaudhuri AB, Sarkar DD (2004) Project tiger reserves: Resources diversity, sustainability, eco- development. Daya Publication, Delhi, India, p 341
Ghosh AK, Baqri QH, Prakash I (1986) Faunal diversity in the Thar Desert: Gaps in research. Scientifi c Publishers, Jodhpur, India, p 410
Gopal B, Sharma KP (1994) Ramsar site of India – Sambhar Lake. WorldWide Fund for Nature—India (WWF-India), New Delhi, India, p 30
Hames RB (1991) Wildlife conservation in tribal society. In: Old fi eld ML, Akom JB (eds) Biodiversity, culture, conservation and eco-development. Westview Press, Boulder, CO, USA, pp 172–199
Islam MZ, Rahmani AR (2004) Important Bird Areas in India: Priority Sites for Conservation. Indian Bird Conservation Network – Bombay Natural History Society (Mumbai) and BirdLife International, UK, p 1133
Islam MZ, Rahmani AR (2008) Potential and existing Ramsar sites of India. Indian Bird Conservation Network, Bombay Natural History Society, and BirdLife International (UK). BNHS-Oxford University Press, Mumbai, p 592
Javed S, Kaul R (2002) Field methods for bird survey. Bombay Natural History Society, Mumbai; Department of Wildlife Sciences, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India and World Pheasant Association, South Asia Regional Offi ce (SARO), p 70
Kandya AK, Gupta A (2007) Biodiversity conservation and legal aspects. Aavishkar Publications, New Delhi, India, p 284
Karanth Ulhas K (2002) The way of the tiger: Natural history and conservation of the endangered big cat. Centre for Wildlife Studies Publications, p 132
Khati Anand S (2004) Indian national parks and sanctuaries: A living portrait of wild India. Pelican Creations International Noida, Hariyana, p 516
B.K. Sharma et al. (eds.), Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India: Conservation and Management of Vertebrates, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-01345-9, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2013
506
Kothari A, Cristopher K, Jha S, Vania F, Das P (2004) Building bridges for conservation: Towards joint management of protected areas in India. Natraj Publishers, Dehradun, Uttrakhand, India, p 356
Linzey A (2009) The Link between animal abuse and human violence. Brighton, UK, and Portland, Sussex Academic Press, USA, p 346
Linzey A (ed.) (2013) The global guide to animal protection. University of Illinois Press, USA. (In Press)
Linzey A, Clarke PB (2005) Animal rights: A historical anthology book. Columbia University Press, NY, USA, p 193
MoEF (1972) Indian Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972. Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India, India
Pathak N (2009) Community conserved areas in India – A Directory. Kalpavriksh, Pune, India, p 812
Pathak R (2006) Indian national parks. Sumit Enterprises, Delhi, India, p 180 Prakash I (1988) Desert ecology: A scientifi c review on Arid zone research. Scientifi c Publishers,
Jodhpur, India, p 313 Rahmani AR (2002) Threatened birds of India: Their conservation requirements. IBCN, BNHS
and Birdlife International Collaboration. Oxford University Press, Mumbai, India Rao AR, Ojha DC, Saxena A (1998) 50 years of arid zone research in India (1947–1997): An anno-
tated bibliography. Central Arid Zone Research Institute, Scientifi c Publishers, Jodhpur, India, p 637
Rathore NS (2004) Fauna of Desert National Park. Conservation Area Series, 19. of Zoological Survey of India Publication, Kolkatta, India, p 135
Rodgers WA, Panwar HS (1988) Planning a wildlife protected area network in India, vol I &II. Wildlife Institute of India, Dehra Dun, Uttrakhand, India, pp 267–339
Seidensticker J, Christi S, Jackson P (1999) Riding the tiger: Tiger conservation in human domi-nated landscape. Cambridge University Press, UK, p 404
Singer P (1995) Animal liberation. PIMLICO, London, UK, p 233 Sutherland WJ (2004) The conservation handbook: Research management and policy. Wiley
Blackwell Science Limited, Oxford, UK, p 296 Thapar V, Rathod FS (2000) Wild tigers of Ranthambhore. Oxford University Press, New Delhi,
India, p 171 The Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972 (2006) As Amended upto 2003. Natraj Publisher, Dehradun,
Uttarakhand, India, p 218 Tyagi BK, Baqri Qaiser H (2005) Changing faunal ecology in the Thar Desert. Scientifi c Publishers,
Jodhpur, India, p 367 Vijayan L (1994) Ramsar sites of India – Keoladeo National Park, Rajasthan. World Wide Fund for
Nature-India (WWF-India), New Delhi, India, p 70 Vijayan VS, Prasad N, Vijayan L, Murlidhar S (2004) Inland wetlands of India – Conservation
priorities. Salim Ali Center for Ornithology and Natural History (SACON), World Wide Fund for Nature-India (WWF-India) and Asian Wetland Bureau (AWB), p 532
Further Readings
507
A Abheda Mahal , 392, 394 Abu Hills , 34, 80–81 Acacia catechu , 12 Action plan, status survey and conservation
of Demoiselle Crane , 253, 256–257 Adventure Sports Festival , 392 Advisory Committee , 415–416 Anas
A. acuta , 203, 206 A. crecca , 202
Anastomus oscitans , 203, 205 Anhinga melanogaster , 202, 203 Animal welfare, ecology, and wildlife biology
and conservation working organizations from India and
abroad , 485–496 Animal Welfare Institute (AWI) , 424 Annual rainfall , 69 Anogeissus pendula , 67, 140, 316 Anthropogenic pressure
altered land use pattern , 193 bird population , 174 fodder and fuel wood , 182
Anthropoides virgo. See Demoiselle Crane Antilope , 287 Antilope cervicapra , 424, 426 Aravallis
conservation of , 459 crop-fi elds , 88 foothills , 81 hills , 107–108 Kumbhalgarh Wildlife Sanctuary ( see
Kumbhalgarh Wildlife Sanctuary) Ardea purpurea , 203, 206
Arid zone climate , 180 vegetation , 182
Asian Openbill , 203, 205 Asian Waterfowl Counts (AWC) , 234–235 Asian Wetland Bureau (AWB) , 232 Avifauna
KNP Asian Openbill , 203, 205 Cormorant , 200, 202 Darter/Snakebird , 202, 203 diverse habitat , 201 Eurasian Spoonbill , 203, 205 Heron , 202 Northern Pintail , 203, 206 Painted storks , 203, 207 Purple Heron , 203, 206 Purple Swamp-hen/Moorhen , 202, 204 Ruddy Shelduck , 203, 204 Teal , 202 waterfowl , 201–202
Sambhar Salt Lake , 185 Thar Desert , 115, 116 threatened species , 208
AWB. See Asian Wetland Bureau (AWB) AWC. See Asian Waterfowl Counts (AWC) AWI. See Animal Welfare Institute (AWI) Axis axis , 18
B Badi Lake, Udaipur , 371, 378 Badoli Temple, Kota , 395 Bandicota bengalensis , 84, 85 Bassi Wildlife Sanctuary , 23–24
Index
B.K. Sharma et al. (eds.), Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India: Conservation and Management of Vertebrates, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-01345-9, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2013
508
BFH. See Bird Feeding Home (BFH) Bhangarh Fort , 387 Bhensroad Garh Wildlife Sanctuary , 24 Bherodeo Wildlife Sanctuary , 291 Bhils , 333, 339–341 Bijolia Temple, Kota , 395, 396 Biodiversity
conservation database information systems , 499–500 ecotourism , 356 strategic planning , 465–467
and humans , 285 and wildlife , 286, 288, 290
Bird Feeding Home (BFH) , 246, 248 Bisalpur Gaadwala Conservation Reserve , 49 Blackbucks , 389, 424, 426 Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) ,
457–458 Boswellia serrata , 12 Breeding site , 269 Breed mugger crocodiles , 223 Buffer zone , 310 Bund Baretha Wildlife Sanctuary , 24–25 Bundi Fort , 393 Butea monosperma , 12 Butorides striatus , 202
C Capacity building document , 251–253 Casmerodius albus , 22 CCAs. See Community Conserved Areas
(CCAs) Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) , 137 Central Zoo Authority (CZA)
acquisition of animals , 412 functions , 411–412 recognition , 412
Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) index , 144
Cervus unicolor , 43 Chambal river basin
climate , 139 conservation problems
biomass resources, protected areas , 151 economic development , 151 ecotourism , 154 institutional capacity , 153 integrated conservation planning ,
149–150 integrated river basin management ,
152–153 irrigation and hydroelectric power
generation , 146
land use and water development projects , 151
pollution , 149 poverty , 146 Ramsar Convention on Wetlands , 152 ravine reclamation , 151–152 ravines and grazing , 149 scarcity of biomass resources , 148 soil erosion , 149 stakeholders and public awareness ,
153–154 water resources management , 150
conservation signifi cance Gangetic Dolphin , 142–143 Gharial , 141–142 Smooth-coated Otter , 143
soil , 140 upper and lower basin , 138 water quality , 137
Chandlai wetland, Jaipur , 371, 372 Chlamydotis
C. macqueenii , 471 C. undulata , 26
CITES. See Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES)
Clarke R. Bavin Award 2007 , 424–428 Climate
Aravalli hills , 107–108 arid, semiarid, and subhumid regions , 67, 68 changes , 73–74, 435–436 characteristics of
during 1900–2008 , 73–74 air temperature , 71 annual rainfall , 69 evapotranspiration requirements , 71–72 long-term rainfall , 74 paleoclimatic changes , 72–73 rainfall distribution , 69–70 relative humidity conditions , 71 solar radiation , 70 sunshine availability , 70 wind regime and associated
phenomena , 71 conservation issues , 435–436 and environmental factors , 74–75 microclimates vs. fauna , 75–77
CMIE index. See Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) index
Cognitive anthropology, tribes Bhil models , 340 cognitive anthropological analysis , 344, 345 cognitive models , 331 competence score , 332 cultural models and frames , 330, 346
Index
509
culture-specifi c predictions , 331 environment-related processes , 330 ethnobiological study , 330 forest inhabitants , 343 forest management , 343 human thought , 330 mountain parent , 343 Phulwari’s inhabitants , 343 social justice , 330 successful Brazilian , 332
Committee for the Purpose of Control and Supervision of Experiments on Animals (CPCSEA) , 414
Common Crane , 26 Common property reserves
controlling factors ( see Controlling factors, Thar Desert)
orans , 300–301 Community conservation , 246, 250 Community Conserved Areas (CCAs)
building capacity , 295 catchment and resource reserve forests
( see Forests) documentation , 294–295 fl oral and faunal species , 287–288 grasslands , 292–293 landscape approach , 295–296 natural resources , 286 sacred spaces , 287 social recognition , 295 wildlife movement , 286
Conservation in situ and ex situ ( see Protected areas (PAs)) and management
Banganga and Gambhiri Rivers , 210–211
Paspalum distichum , 209, 211–212 Prosopis julifl ora , 209, 211
population explosion, urbanization, and industrialization , 436–440
protected areas , 448–451 recommendations for management , 459–462 Smooth-coated Otter ( see Smooth-coated
Otter) threats ( see Kumbhalgarh Wildlife
Sanctuary) wildlife conservation ( see Wildlife
conservation) Conservation management. See Wetland birds Conservation planning
avian diversity, protection of , 434 Chambal River basin , 459 Lesser Florican in western India , 456
Conservation Reserve Management Committee , 416
Controlling factors, Thar Desert Antilope cervicapra , 305 Boselaphus tragocamelus , 302, 305 desert-dwelling animals , 302 dietary habits , 302, 304 food habits , 302 Gazella bennettii , 300, 303 human-dominated landscape , 301 meso-and macrofauna , 301–302 seed species , 305, 306
Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) , 232
Corbett Tiger Reserve , 277 Cormorant , 200, 202 CPCB. See Central Pollution Control Board
(CPCB) CPCSEA. See Committee for the Purpose
of Control and Supervision of Experiments on Animals (CPCSEA)
Cranes , 288 Cremnomys cutchicus , 84, 85, 89, 551 Crocodylus
C. niloticus , 225 C. palustris , 223 C. porosus , 224
Crop-fi elds Aravallis , 86 bio-fencing , 88–90 stone wall fencing , 89, 90 certain salient, internal logic of , 341 cognitive anthropological
studies , 344–345 headmen and caste councils , 342 Herbalist Kalaji , 341, 342 “internalized” , 346 leopards , 341 NGO’s projects , 343 politics and economics , 344 revamped model , 341 RFD , 342–343 village-based forest management
institutions , 343 Culture patterns, tribes , 346–348 Cutch Rock-rat , 84, 85 Cynopterus sphinx , 451 CZA. See Central Zoo Authority (CZA)
D Daboia russelii , 329 Darrah Wildlife Sanctuary , 25 Darte/Snakebird , 200, 202 Database information systems , 499–500 Demoiselle Crane , 26, 245–259
Index
510
Demoiselle Crane Conservation Organization , 51
Dendrogram , 86, 88 Desert
microclimates and fauna , 75 soil water potential , 76 Tatera indica , 76
Desert National Park (DNP) Biosphere Reserve , 464 and BNHS , 457 protection and proper management , 464 and Rajasthan, Jaisalmer district of , 455
Distribution records , 279 Smooth-coated Otter , 274–276
Diversity , 116, 117, 121–122, 124 DNP. See Desert National Park (DNP) Dry land management , 127 Dunaliella salina , 195
E Ecology
fast-changing , 447 fauna ( see Thar Desert) Keoladeo National Park , 456, 457
Ecosystem-based approach , 136 Ecotourism
climatic variation , 366 defi nition , 354 Desert Wildlife Sanctuary/DNP
Demoiselle Cranes , 366 Gadisar Pond , 366 golden sand , 366 langurs , 366 Rohida tree , 366 sand dune , 366
Hadoti region Abhera Mahal, Kota , 394 Badoli Temple , 395 Bijolia Temple , 395, 396 bird-watching , 388, 391 Bundi Fort , 393 fairs and festivals , 396 Garh Palace, Kota , 392, 393 Jagmandir-Kishore Sagar , 392, 393 Lord Keshorai Temple , 394 prehistoric sites , 392 promotion of ecotourism , 392 Semnopithecus entellus , 397 wildlife protected areas , 388
KNP, Bharatpur , 357–362 Kumbhalgarh WLS , 363, 370
Mount Abu, Sirohi climatic variation , 362 Nakki Lake , 364 tourist infl ux , 363, 365 Travers Tank , 363 wetland , 365
Nakki Lake , 368 potential ecotourism destinations ,
371, 381–384 potential sites , 358 RNP, Sawai Madhopur
inhabits varieties , 357, 359 Jogi Mahal , 357, 359
Sambhar Salt Lake , 380–385 Sariska Tiger Reserve, Alwar , 363 tourist infl ux , 355–356, 368, 369 Travers Tank , 367 wetlands of Rajasthan
Aravallis , 373–375 Badi Lake , 371, 378 Chandlai , 371, 372 Chittorgarh Fort , 371, 380 Fateh Sagar , 371, 378 Lake Jhadol , 371, 379 Mansagar Lake , 371 Pichola Lake , 371, 375–377
Ecotourism Advisory Bureau , 355 Ecotourism policy. See Rajasthan Ecotourism
Policy, 2010 El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) ,
107, 113 Endangered species
project tiger , 19 wildlife , 29
Environmental Law vs Union of India , 406 Environmental Protection Act , 22 Environmental science , 475–481 Eurasian collared dove , 126 Eurasian Spoonbill , 203, 205 Eurasian Thick-knee , 187, 189
F Fateh Sagar , 57, 61, 371, 378 Fauna , 292 Faunal diversity , 464 Faunal ecology. see Thar Desert Faunal groups/individual species , 451–453 Faunal population and demographic trends ,
96–100 Flora , 140 Florida Panther , 158 Forest (Conservation) Act 1980 , 404
Index
511
Forest Act VII , 403–404 Forest Rights Act , 2006, 404–405 Forests
Aravalli hills, Bherodeo Lok-sanchiri Bhanota , 291
Arvari Sansad , 290 Barnakawas villagers , 290 Bherodeo Wildlife Sanctuary , 291 Kailadevi area , 290 NGO Tarun Bharat Sangh , 288 streams and reservoirs , 288 terrain of Bhanota , 289 Umed Mal Lodha Memorial Trust , 290
Fuel wood and fodder , 310, 314, 316, 317, 320, 322, 324
G Gandhi Sagar Dam , 138 Ganges River system , 137 Gangetic Dolphin
aquatic food chain , 142 habitat unsuitable , 148 migratory waterfowls , 137 National Chambal Sanctuary , 141
Gangetic River Dolphin , 37 Gaps , 464–465 Garh Palace, Kota , 392, 393 Gavialis gangeticus
National Chambal Sanctuary ( see also National Chambal Sanctuary)
aquatic wildlife , 140 breeding population , 142, 222 captive-reared restocking
programme , 141 crocodiles , 141 mass death event , 226–227 migratory water-fowls , 137 nonbreeding population , 222
Genetic sex determination (GSD) , 225 Ghana. See Keoladeo National Park (KNP) Gharial
conservation signifi cance , 141–142 Golunda ellioti , 85 Grains , 251, 254, 257 Grassland ecosystems , 25 Greater Flamingo , 189–191 Grus
antigone antigone ( see Sarus Crane) G. grus , 26 G. leucogeranus , 206, 208–209
GSD. See Genetic sex determination (GSD)
H Habitat destruction , 441, 451, 452 Hadoti Naturalist Society , 265 Hadoti region, ecotourism
Abhera Mahal, Kota , 392, 394 Badoli Temple , 395 Bijolia Temple , 395, 396 bird-watching , 388–391 Bundi Fort , 393 fairs and festivals , 396 Garh Palace, Kota , 392, 393 Jagmandir-Kishore Sagar , 392, 394 Lord Keshorai Temple , 393, 394 prehistoric sites , 392 promotion of ecotourism , 392 Semnopithecus entellus , 394, 397 wildlife protected areas , 388
Hanuman langur , 395, 397 Harsh Parvat Temple, Sikar , 386 Hedge-hog , 87 Heritage tourism and wildlife , 354, 355 Heron , 200 Houbara Bustard , 26 Hystrix indica , 123
I IBA. See Important Bird Areas (IBAs) ICCAs. See Indigenous and Community
Conserved Areas (ICCAs) IGNP. See Indira Gandhi Nahar Project (IGNP) Illegal wildlife trade , 417–420 Important Bird Areas (IBAs)
Alniya, large reservoir of , 60, 62 bird species , 60, 63 Critically Endangered avians , 63 endangered avians , 63 Fateh Sagar , 60, 61 Near Threatened avians , 63 Pichhola Lake , 60, 61 Sambhar Salt Lake , 60, 62 vulnerable avians , 63
India Meteorological Department , 70 Indian Peafowl , 126 Indian Skimmer , 36 Indian Spiny-tailed Lizards , 461 Indigenous and Community Conserved Areas
(ICCAs) , 286 Indigenous peoples
human illnesses , 330 Phulwari Ki Nal Wildlife Sanctuary ,
327–329
Index
512
Indira Gandhi Nahar Project (IGNP) fast-changing ecology , 447 grasslands , 460 impact of , 127–129
International Development Agency (IDA) , 128 International Union for Conservation of
Nature (IUCN) , 232 International Waterfowl and Wetlands
Research Bureau (IWRB) , 232
J Jagmandir, Kota , 392, 394 Jaisamand Wildlife Sanctuary , 25–28 Jamwa Ramgarh Wildlife Sanctuary , 27, 28 Jawahar Sagar Wildlife Sanctuary , 27 J & K Wildlife (Protection) Act , 405 Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) , 405 Jor beed Gadwala , 49 JPC. See Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC)
K Kailana Lake , 118, 119 Keladevi Wildlife Sanctuary , 29 Keoladeo National Park (KNP)
Ajan Bund , 196 aquatic vegetation , 20 avifaunal research , 206–208 conservation and management
Banganga and Gambhiri Rivers , 210–211
Paspalum distichum , 209, 211–212 Prosopis julifl ora , 209, 211
earthen bunds , 196 ecotourism , 358–359, 362 evanescent rain-fed wetland , 196 faunal diversity
avifauna , 201–203 invertebrates , 201 mammals , 204–205 reptiles , 200 vertebrates , 201
fl oral diversity and habitats , 199–200 geographical features , 198 history of , 19, 196 Khus grass , 23 Large Egret , 22 marshes of , 20–21 Paspalum distichum , 23 protected areas , 448–449 Sarus Crane , 240, 263 Siberian Crane , 206, 208 threatened avifaunal species , 208
threatened mammals , 22 water birds , 21 wetland ecosystems , 22
Kesar Bagh Wildlife Sanctuary , 29 Kheechan , 245–259 KNP. See Keoladeo National Park (KNP) Kota
Garh Palace , 392, 393 Hadoti Naturalist Society , 265 Hadoti Naturalists Society , 457–458 hydroelectric thermal power plant , 449 Jagmandir , 392, 394 Sarus Crane, breeding success of , 268 and Tonk , 266
Krishi Avam Paristhitiki Vikas Sansthan (KRAPAVIS) , 300
Kumbhalgarh Wildlife Sanctuary climate , 107–108 exogenous species , 111 Kumbhalgarh Fort , 363, 370 location , 94, 95 population and demographic trends
carnivorous , 99 crop raiding , 101 mammalian wildlife status , 97 MEI , 100 overall trends , 109
threats to faunal diversity adaptation , 109 climate , 107–108 disease , 104 encounters with humans , 106 exotic weed species , 104–105 forest fi re , 105 human subsidies , 109, 111 monoculture plantation , 106 overgrazing , 103 road accidents , 101–103 tree cutting , 104
L Laggar Falcon , 127 Lake Jhadol, Udaipur , 371, 379 Lake Palace, Udaipur , 375 Land degradation , 89, 445 Lanius vittatus , 60 Large Egret , 20, 22 Leopards
Bengal Tiger , 420, 421 gods , 340 human-leopard confl ict , 321 poaching , 452 rampant killing , 417–418
Index
513
skins , 424, 426, 427 tiger , 419
Lepus nigricollis , 32, 122 Lesser Flamingo , 63, 125, 185, 187, 189–190 Lime-stone mining , 437 Little Brown Dove , 126 Livestock
orans , 300 overgrazing , 103 Sariska National Park , 312–314
Local communities, STR Anogeissus pendula , 316 deforestation , 323 eco-development programs , 325 environment and conservation , 320–321,
324–325 fodder , 314, 316 fuelwood and fodder exploitation , 317,
320, 322 grass extraction , 316, 319 human population , 314–315, 321 indigenous tree species , 316 livelihood sources , 318–320, 323–324 livestock population , 315–316, 321, 322 methodology , 313–314 plant species , 316, 318 protected areas , 310 study area , 310, 311 villages , 311–313 Ziziphus mauritiana , 316
Lutrogale perspicillata. See Smooth-coated Otter
M Madhuca indica , 333 Mahua , 333, 339, 342 Male Sambar , 43 Mansagar Lake , 371, 374 Marble mining , 43, 46 Margalef’s richness index (MRI) ,
83, 85, 86, 91 Melophus lathami , 60 Merops orientalis , 25, 186 Millardia meltada , 85 Minimum convex polygon (MCP)
technique , 164 Mining
impact on ravines , 149 marble mining , 43, 46 stone mining , 437–440 surface , 89
Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF) , 53, 418, 456, 462, 464
Mogiyas , 19 Monoculture plantation , 106 Moong , 128 Moorhen , 200, 202 Mount Abu Wildlife Sanctuary
bird diversity , 32 conservation issues , 32 eco-sensitive area , 31 faunal species , 34 fl oral biodiversity , 31 human-bear confl icts , 32 lion and tiger , 32 monsoon , 31 threatened species , 32
Mugger , 34 Mukundra Hills National Park , 23, 388, 389 Multivariate ENSO Index (MEI) , 100, 108 Muscicapa dauurica , 60 Mus platythrix , 89, 90 Mycteria leucocephala , 36, 185, 203, 207, 292
N Nahargarh Wildlife Sanctuary , 34 Nakki Lake , 362, 364 National Board for Wildlife
functions , 411 tiger reserves , 413
National Chambal Gharial Wildlife Sanctuary. See National Chambal Sanctuary
National Chambal Sanctuary aquatic species , 223 birds and animals , 35 breed mugger crocodiles , 223 crocodile programme , 223 Crocodylus niloticus , 225 eroded alluvium , 223 ex situ and in situ conservation sites ,
223, 224 fi sh-eating species , 226 fl agship species , 35 Gangetic Dolphin , 142–143 gastroliths , 226 GSD , 225 hatch-lings , 225 juvenile feeding , 226 lazy sliding gait , 226 map , 232, 233 mating , 225 Mugger crocodiles , 142 origin of , 34 pitcher-shaped egg , 225 pollution , 149 riverine heritage , 37
Index
514
National Chambal Sanctuary (cont.)sanctuary area , 223 sexually dimorphic crocodilian , 224 Smooth-coated Otter
Corbett Tiger Reserve , 277 denning and grooming , 275, 277 digging dens , 277, 278 distribution of , 274, 276 fi sh specialist , 277 gestation period , 279 Indian Wildlife (Protection)
Act 1972 , 275 resting in sun , 275, 276 saltwater areas , 275 sexual maturity , 279 spraint sites , 277, 278 Vindhya hill range , 275
taxonomically and structurally unique , 224 tiger shoots , 37 tropical dry deciduous forest , 35 TSD , 225 uniform sharp teeth , 226 velocity-free aquatic environments , 224 water level rises , 223
National Lake Conservation Program (NLCP) , 194
National Park (NPs) community reserve , 6 conservation reserve , 5–6 PAs , 7 Rivers Chambal , 12 tigers , 23 WLSs , 5
National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) , 412, 418, 428
Natural calamities , 442 Nature conservation
tribal identity , 339 Naveen Raheja vs Union of India
and others , 406 Nilgai , 184 NLCP. See National Lake Conservation
Program (NLCP) Non-fl ying small mammals , 87 Northern Pintail , 203, 206, 362 NPs. See National Park (NPs) NTCA. See National Tiger Conservation
Authority (NTCA)
O Oenanthe pleschanka , 187 Orans , 300–301 Oriolus xanthornus , 60
P Painted Francolin , 63 Painted Stork , 203, 207, 391 Painted Stork Community Reserve , 388, 391 Paintings , 392 Palash , 34 Paleoclimatic changes , 72–73 Pallas’s Fish Eagle , 240 Panthera pardus fusca . See Leopard Paradoxurus hermaphroditus , 96 PAs. See Protected areas (PAs) Paspalum distichum , 23, 200, 209, 211–212 Pennisetum typhoides , 128 People’s participation , 269, 270 Peregrine Falcon , 32 Phalacrocorax carbo , 202, 203 Pheasant-tailed Jacana , 20 Philomachus pugnax , 187, 188 Phoeniconaias minor , 189, 190 Phoenicopterus roseus , 190–192 Phoenix sylveatris , 43, 45 Phulwari Ki Nal Wildlife Sanctuary
Bhil , 333, 334 dry tropical deciduous forest
reserve , 332 economic survival , 333 Magra Baosi , 328 RFD , 333, 334 rock outcroppings , 327, 328 Russell’s Viper , 329 wild animal , 329
Pichola Lake, Udaipur , 60, 61, 371, 375 Pied Kingfi sher , 60 Platalea leucorodia , 203, 205 Platanista gangetica . See Gangetic
River Dolphin Poaching
animals , 428 illegal wildlife trade , 417–420 otters dressed to kill , 280 tiger population , 12–13 tigers and panthers , 423, 425
Porphyrio porphyrio , 202, 204 Protected areas (PAs). See also Zoo
bird sanctuary , 50–51 community conservation area , 6–7 community reserve , 6 conservation reserves , 7, 49–50 eco-sensitive area , 6 in situ conservation efforts , 51–52 Keoladeo National Park
aquatic vegetation , 20 Four-horned male Antelope , 24 history of , 19
Index
515
Khus grass , 23 Large Egret , 22 marshes of , 20–22
medicinal plant reserved area , 7, 50 Mt Abu ESA , 50 Mukundra Hills National Park , 22 Ranthambhore National Park/
Ranthambhore Tiger Reserve Acacia catechu , 12 A. pendula , 12 Boswellia serrata , 12 Butea monosperma , 12 Dhawra , 8 diurnal , 17 human settlements and livestocks , 16 Khos , 12 landscape , 16, 17 Mogiyas , 19 nocturnal creatures , 13 pressure pose disturbance , 16 Spotted Deer Axis axis , 18
research , 63–65 Wildlife Sanctuary , 5
Bassi Wildlife Sanctuary , 23–24 Bhensroad Garh , 24 Bund Baretha , 24–25 Darrah WLS , 25 Desert National Park ( see Desert
National Park) Psittacula krameri , 126 Puma concolor , 158 Purple Heron , 203, 206 Purple Swamp-hen , 202, 204 Python molurus molurus , 54
R Radio-collaring , 160–162 Rajasthan
birds , 119 canal , 127 CCAs ( see Community Conserved Areas
(CCAs)) CITES species , 469–472 crocodilians , 224 database information systems, biodiversity
conservation , 499–500 IGNP , 128 insect , 116 National Chambal Sanctuary , 222, 223, 226 RNP, Sawai Madhopur
avians , 359 scheduled fauna , 473–474
tribes ( see Tribes) wildlife and natural resources, protection
of , 497–498 wildlife sciences
doctoral/post-doctoral research , 482–484
international, national and state level awards , 475–481
undergraduate and postgraduate courses , 482–484
zoos of ( see Zoo) Rajasthan Biological Diversity Rules ,
2009, 408 Rajasthan Ecotourism Policy , 2010, 356–357 Rajasthan Forest Department (RFD) , 333,
342–343 Rajasthan State Forest Policy , 2010, 408–409 Ramgarh Vishdhari Wildlife Sanctuary , 38 Ramsagar Wildlife Sanctuary , 40 Ramsar Convention
river basin management , 152 wetland birds , 234–236
Ramsar Site. See Keoladeo National Park (KNP)
Ranthambore National Park (RNP) air journey , 163 animal capture , 161 chemically immobilized , 160 Indian Air Force helicopter, tiger
transportation , 161, 163 inhabits varieties , 357, 359 Jogi Mahal , 357, 359 man-animal encounter , 450 PAs and corridors development , 455–456 radio-collared , 160–162 and Tiger Reserve , 467 xylazine and ketamine , 160, 161
Rat Cutch Rock-rat ( see Cutch Rock-rat) Golunda ellioti , 85, 89
Ravine system alluvial plains , 139 fl ora , 140 and grazing , 149 soil erosion , 151
Regional Research Station , 456 Reintroduction. See Sariska Tiger Reserve
(STR) Reintroduction programs , 455 Religion , 335, 338 Research impetus , 464–465 Revival techniques , 157 River Tern , 187, 188, 236
Index
516
RNP. See Ranthambhore National Park (RNP) Rohida , 366 Rose-ringed parakeet , 126 Royal Bengal tiger , 13, 43, 205, 357, 359, 421 Ruddy Shelduck , 203, 204 Ruff , 187–189 Rural landscape , 267, 270 Rynchops albicolis , 36
S Sajjangarh Wildlife Sanctuary , 40–41, 386 Saker Falcon , 419 Salar , 34 Salim Ali Centre for Ornithology and Natural
History (SACON) , 456 Salim Ali Interpretation Centre , 358 Salman Khan case , 422–424 Sambar , 43 Sambhar Salt Lake
avian diversity aquatic avifaunal species , 188 avifauna , 185 Black-winged Stilts , 187–188 Greater Flamingo , 190–191 Lesser Flamingo , 190, 192 Oenanthe pleschanka , 187 River Tern , 187, 188 Ruff , 187, 188 terrestrial avian species , 185–186 Waterbirds , 187, 189 White-naped Tit , 187
biological diversity aquatic beetles , 184 macrophytes , 182, 211 phytoplankton , 181 vegetation , 182 vertebrate fauna , 184 zooplankton , 182–184
catchment , 178–180 ecotourism , 370–380 historical and mythological background ,
175–178 IBA , 59–63, 174 integrated conservation strategy , 174 location , 175 physical properties, lake water , 180–181 potential threats
altered land use pattern , 193 anthropogenic activities , 193–194 anthropogenic pressures , 193 conservation planning , 194 deforestation , 193 Dunaliella salina algae , 195
ecotourism destination , 195 excessive resource utilization , 193 legal aspect of conservation , 195 NLCP , 194 siltation and disturbance, lake bed , 193 watershed area , 195 water spread shrinkage , 193
rainfall , 179 saline lake , 174 waterfowl habitats , 174 wetlands , 174
Sanda . See Indian Spiny-tailed Lizards Sansar Chand case , 420–422 Sarcogyps calvus , 98 Sariska National Park
livestock , 312–314 villages , 314–316, 318, 320
Sariska Tiger Reserve (STR) Aravalli formation , 44 capture and translocation
food habits , 165–166 home range , 164–165 homing in technique , 164 MCP technique , 164 RNP ( see Ranthambhore National Park
(RNP)) tiger release site and enclosure , 163
Florida Panther , 158 local communities ( see Local communities,
STR) marble mining , 46 Phoenix sylveatris , 45 population growth , 167, 168 protected areas , 448 relocation of tiger , 450 Sambar , 43 study area , 159–160 tiger population , 158 tourist traffi c , 46
Sarus Crane awareness program , 267, 269–270 breeding pairs , 266 breeding success , 268 conservation , 460–461 distribution range , 262–264 heart-rendering distress call , 262 local communities and NGO’s , 267 natural and man-made wetlands , 262 nesting , 267 pesticides , 240 resident species , 262 symbol of fertility , 262
Sawai Mansingh Wildlife Sanctuary , 12, 34, 47 Semnopithecus entellus . See Hanuman langur
Index
517
Shergarh Wildlife Sanctuary , 47 Shrew , 84, 85, 87, 89, 91 Siberian Crane , 200, 202, 206, 208–211,
454–455 Sitamata Wildlife Sanctuary , 47 Small mammalian diversity
Abu Hill , 80–81 Aravallis , 81–82 crop-fi elds
Aravallis , 86 bio-fencing , 89–90 stone-wall fencing , 89, 90
fragmentation , 86, 88 Kota-Jhalawar zone , 82 Margalef’s index , 85, 86 Mount Abu WLS , 91 species distribution
alpha diversity , 85 beta diversity , 85 dendrogram , 83, 86, 88
surface mining , 89 trap index , 83, 84, 86 Udaipur-Banswara zone , 82
Small mammals , 80, 83, 84 Smooth-coated Otter
conservation prospects aquatic environments , 274 carnivorous mammals , 274 fi shing practices , 274 freshwater and marine habitats , 274 Keoladeo National Park , 274–275 loss of habitat , 279 Mionictis , 274 Mustelinae , 274 National Chambal Sanctuary ( see
National Chambal Sanctuary) poaching , 280 WWF-India strives , 274
Socio-economic status CMIE index , 144 district profi les , 145 human density , 144 irrigation projects , 144 local communities, STR ( See Local
communities, STR) panchayat samitis , 144 protected area, conservation status , 146
Solar radiation , 70 Sorsan Great Indian Bustard Sanctuary , 388 Sorson Sanctuary , 388, 389 Space Application Centre (SAC) , 233, 365 Spiny-tailed Lizards. See Indian Spiny-tailed
Lizards
Spizaetus cirrhatus , 36 Spotted Deer , 33 State Board for Wildlife , 415 Steering Committee , 416–417 Sterna aurantia , 187, 188 Stone mining , 437 STR. See Sariska Tiger Reserve (STR) Streptopelia
S. decaocto , 126 S. senegalensis , 126
Sudashri forest , 25 Suncus murinus , 84, 89 Sundhamata Conservation Reserve , 49 Sympatric species , 279
T Tadorna ferruginea , 203, 204 Tal Chhapar Wildlife Sanctuary , 48–49, 127 Tatera indica , 76 Teal , 202 Temperature-dependent sex determination
(TSD) , 225 Tetracerus quadricornis , 33 Thar Desert
conservation strategies , 445–446 materials and methods
avifauna , 115–116 evenness measures , 116 insects , 115 species diversity indices , 116 species richness and abundance , 116 spider , 115
results ant , 118 beetle , 118 birds , 119 diversity indices , 121 fi shes , 118 insect , 116–117 mammals , 122–123 species richness and abundance , 120 spider , 118 termite , 117 threatened bird species , 122
scientifi c studies , 115 Spiny-tailed Lizards ( see Indian Spiny-
tailed Lizards) Tal Chhaper Sanctuary , 300 vegetation
herbs , 114–115 small trees and shrubs , 114
wasteland , 299
Index
518
Threats contamination , 239–241 habitat degradation , 239 wetlands loss , 239
Tiger Cheetah , 455 dried tiger skins , 427 population , 158, 167, 168 Rajasthan Police Department , 427
diurnal , 17 human settlements and livestocks , 13 Khos , 12 Mogiyas , 19 nocturnal creatures , 13
Sansar Chand case , 420–422 Tiger and Other Endangered Species Crime
Control Bureau , 414–415 Tiger Conservation Foundation , 417 Tiger Reserve
RNP , 359 Sariska ( see Sariska Tiger Reserve (STR))
T. N. Godavarman vs Union of India , 406 Todgarh-Raoli Wildlife Sanctuary , 48 Tourism , 251. See also Ecotourism Toxicants , 75, 240, 371, 436, 444 Tradition
community conservation , 286 cultural and spiritual , 292 inequities , 294 pastures , 292
Traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) , 331 Tribes
nature reverence and pro-environmental , 332
Phulwari Ki Nal Wildlife Sanctuary ( see Phulwari Ki Nal Wildlife Sanctuary)
widespread cultural modeling , 329
U Udaipur
Badi Lake , 371, 378 Fateh Sagar , 371, 378 Lake Jhadol , 371, 379 Lake Palace , 375 Pichola Lake , 371, 375–377
Umbrella species Gangetic Dolphin ( see Gangetic Dolphin) Gavialis gangeticus ( see Gavialis
gangeticus ) UNESCO World Heritage Site , 357 Uromastyx hardwickii . see Indian Spiny-tailed
Lizards
V Van Vihar Wildlife Sanctuary , 40 Vetiveria zizanioides , 22 Vyaghra . See Tiger
W Waterfowl
avifauna , 201 Paspalum distichum , 211 Satellite Wetlands , 180 wetland habitat , 199
Wetland fl amingo , 190 NLCP , 194
Wetland birds conservation strategy , 241 contamination , 239–241 ecosystem service values , 237 fi eldwork , 235 habitat degradation , 239 Jawai dam , 235 land use statistics , 233 loss of wetlands , 232, 239 Near-threatened birds , 236 spatial distribution , 233 threatened species , 236, 237 waterbird populations , 236 waterfowl , 233 wetland sites, prioritization of , 238
Wildlife and biodiversity conservation , 286 Sariska Wildlife Sanctuary , 291
Wildlife conservation Advisory Committee , 415–416 Central Zoo Authority
acquisition of animals , 412 functions , 411–412 recognition , 412
Committee for the Purpose of Control and Supervision of Experiments on Animals , 414
Conservation Reserve Management Committee , 416
history of forest laws Forest (Conservation)
Act , 1980, 404 Forest Rights Act , 2006, 404–405
illegal wildlife trade , 417–420 Indian and State Forest Acts , 403 Indian Constitution , 402 judicial activism and wildlife law , 406 National Biodiversity Authority , 414 National Board for Wildlife , 410–411
Index
519
National Tiger Conservation Authority constitution of fund , 413 grants and loans , 413 powers and functions , 413
Rajasthan Biological Diversity Rules , 2009, 414
Rajasthan Ecotourism Policy , 2010 facilities for ecotourists , 410 guiding principles , 409 objectives , 409 policy implementation , 410 strategies , 409
Rajasthan State Forest Policy , 2010, 408–409
State Board for Wildlife , 415 Steering Committee , 416–417 Tiger and Other Endangered Species
Crime Control Bureau , 414–415 Tiger Conservation Foundation , 417
Wildlife crimes Kalya Bawaria case , 423, 425 Rajasthan Police
Department , 424, 426, 427 Salman Khan case , 422–424
Wildlife Institute of India (WII) , 264 Wildlife outside Protected Area , 466 Wildlife Protection Act (WPA) , 1972
Advisory Committee , 415–416 Conservation Reserve Management
Committee , 416 CPCSEA , 414 CZA
acquisition of animals , 412 functions , 411–412 recognition , 412
judicial activism and wildlife law , 406 National Biodiversity Authority , 414 National Board for Wildlife , 410 NTCA
constitution of fund , 413 grants and loans , 413 powers and functions , 413
State Board for Wildlife , 415 Steering Committee , 416–417
Tiger and Other Endangered Species Crime Control Bureau , 414–415
Tiger Conservation Foundation , 417 Wildlife Sanctuary , 5 Wildlife tourism
and heritage , 354 National Tourism Advisory Council , 371 and nature , 388
Wildlife Trade, Indian Constitution , 402 World Biodiversity Conservation Strategy , 4 World Meteorological Organization (WMO) , 73 World Wide Fund for Nature-India (WWF
India) , 246, 254
Z Ziziphus mauritiana , 316 Zoo
acquisition of animals , 412 administrative responsibility
animal feeding , 59 caretaker and medication , 57 cleaning and maintenance, animal
enclosures , 54 intensive care unit , 57 orthopedic surgery , 58
animals bred , 54 Central Zoo Authority , 53
acquisition of animals , 412 functions , 411–412 recognition , 412
functions , 411–412 Important Bird Areas
Alniya, large reservoir of , 60, 62 bird species , 57, 60 critically endangered avians , 60 endangered avians , 63 Fateh Sagar , 60, 61 Near Threatened avians , 63 Vulnerable avians , 60
recognition , 412 recommendation , 55, 57, 59 tourists visit , 54
Zoological Survey of India (ZSI) , 462
Index
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The Book and Its Audience
This is the fi rst ever scientifi c documentation of the faunal wealth of the Indian desert state—Rajasthan, covering the species diversity, distribution, and conservation status. A scholarly contribution to the fi eld of knowledge, this monumental work provides novel and vital information on the vertebrate faunal heritage of India’s largest state.
Broadly falling under the Indo-Malaya Ecozone, the three major biomes of Rajasthan include deserts and xeric shrublands; tropical and sub-tropical dry broad-leaf forests; and tropical and sub-tropical moist broadleaf forests. The ecoregions thus covered are North Western thorn scrub forests and the Thar Desert; Khathiar- Gir dry deciduous forests and the Upper Gangetic Plains moist deciduous forests, respectively.
Contrary to popular belief, the well-known Thar or Great Indian Desert occupies only a part of the state. In fact, for the convenience of study, Rajasthan can be seen as diagonally divided by Aravalli mountain ranges into arid and semiarid regions. The latter has a spectacular variety of highly diversifi ed and unique yet fragile eco-systems comprising lush green fi elds, marshes, grasslands, rocky patches and hilly terrains, dense forests, the southern plateau, freshwater wetlands, and salt lakes.
Apart from the fl oral richness, the faunal abundance from fi shes to mammals including the fl agship and threatened species namely tiger, leopard, great Indian bustard and lesser fl orican, White-naped Tit, raptors, Demoiselle and Sarus Crane, chelones, bats, wild ungulates, small cats, bear, wolf, Smooth-coated Indian Otter, Spiny-tailed Lizard, Gaint Flying Squirrel, Gharial and Gangetic River Dolphin described in more than 20 chapters penned by top-notch wildlife experts, research scholars, and academics, makes this volume more palatable and wholesome.
Chapters covering fossil records; conservation of biodiversity via the age-old public science of the desert; anthropological account of communities and tribes; Sociocultural, mythological, and historical aspects of faunal conservation and the fauna in retrospect (covered in Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan: General Background and Ecology of Vertebrates, Volume-1, B.K. Sharma et al. (eds.), Springer, 2013); wildlife trade; ecotourism; climate and other environmental factors like Indira Gandhi Nahar Pariyojna (IGNP) believed to have changed the ecological face of western Rajasthan; protected area network; tiger reintroduction experiment; and
B.K. Sharma et al. (eds.), Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India: Conservation and Management of Vertebrates, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-01345-9, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2013
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community conservation are key attractions. The world famous heronry, tiger reserves, wildlife sanctuaries and some threat-ridden biodiversity rich areas shall certainly draw the attention of readers from around the world.
The last chapter highlighting issues and insights on conservation and manage-ment, initiatives, and gaps in research would help researchers from India and abroad to identify potential areas of future collaborative work. The strategies suggested herein can be a powerful tool for international conservational advocacy.
The elaborate content supported by rare photographs and paintings has implica-tions for faunal ecology in similar habitats elsewhere on the Earth. Through this mammoth volume, editors have dearly embraced the state of Rajasthan as a whole with particular emphasis on the vertebrate faunal diversity and key aspects of its conservation management.
The original manuscript initially conceived and titled as Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India: Ecology and Conservation of Vertebrates was a bit too large to be presented as a single volume and so the same was split into two separate books/volumes entitled Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India: General Background and Ecology of Vertebrates , Volume-1 and Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India: Conservation and Management of Vertebrates , Volume-2. It is strongly advised that the two books are read and consulted in conjunction with one another rather a set of two closely related books to have an overall picture of the vertebrate faunal abun-dance of Rajasthan and its conservation management.
Type of Work
Text and Reference Book
Audience/Written For
Teachers; researchers; amateur and advanced students of zoology, environmental sci-ence, wildlife and conservation biology, animal behavior, wildlife organizations; free-lancers, nature lovers; wildlife photographers, policy-makers; and citizens in general.
Key words
Indian Desert State; Rajasthan; Faunal Heritage; Tiger Reserve; Arid Ecosystem; Bishnoi Community; UNESCO-World Heritage Site; Aravalli Hills; Faunal Conservation in Rajasthan; History of Faunal Conservation in Rajasthan; Hunting Tribes of Rajasthan; Tiger Reintroduction Program; Great Indian Bustard; Panthera tigris; Sambhar Lake; Protected Area; Community Conservation; Chambal Riverine System; Gharial; Legal Framework; Keoladeo National Park; Ecotourism; Nature Reverence.
The Book and Its Audience
523
Dr. B.K. Sharma (Chief Editor) is Associate Professor and Head, Department of Zoology at R.L. Saharia Government P.G. College, Kaladera (Jaipur), Rajasthan, India. Dr. Sharma is a recipi-ent of coveted national and international fellow-ships, awards and recognitions namely, Doctoral and Post-doctoral research fellowships of the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), Council of Scienti fi c and Industrial Research (CSIR) and Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India at Maulana Azad Medical College, New Delhi; Commonwealth Academic Staff Fellowship at University College
London (UCL), UK; Visiting Fellowship under Indian National Science Academy (INSA) and German Research Foundation’s (DFG) Bilateral Exchange Programme at University of Heidelberg, Germany; Royal Society’s Incoming Fellowship at University of Nottingham, UK; Visiting Scientist under DST’s Indo-Slovenian Joint Scienti fi c and Technological Cooperation Programme (2011–2014); Country Advisor for India under “Development Partnerships in Higher Education (DelPHE) Programme” of the British Council, UK and Humane Education Award-2009 by the International Network for Humane Education (InterNICHE, UK) and Proefdiervrij—the Dutch Society for Replacement of Animal Testing. During 2010–2011, he was invited as a key member of the “Core Expert Committee to Consider Discontinuation of Dissection of Animals in Zoology/Life Science in Indian Universities and Colleges”. The committee was constituted by the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD), Government of India and the University Grants Commission (UGC)—apex body governing the Indian higher education system. A member of several national and international academic, scienti fi c and professional bodies including the Indian Science Congress Association, American Association for Advancement of Science (AAAS) and International Union for Conservation of
About the Editors
B.K. Sharma et al. (eds.), Faunal Heritage of Rajasthan, India: Conservation and Management of Vertebrates, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-01345-9, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2013
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Nature (IUCN), Species Survival Commission (SSC), Flamingo Specialist Group (FSG), he has published research papers in national and international peer-reviewed scienti fi c journals apart from organizing a national conference and a workshop cum symposium. Areas of his research interests include “Ecology”, “Wildlife and Conservation Biology”, “Directed Differentiation of Embryonic Stem Cells into Hepatocytes for use in Bio-arti fi cial liver (BAL) Device and other potential Tissue Engineering Applications” and “Development of Novel Software Technologies, Arti fi cial Intelligence Devices and other superior Educational Paradigms like simu-lated dissections and Computer Assisted Learning (CAL) methods as Better Pedagogical Tools for Life Science (Zoology) Curriculum with a Perspective on Humane Education”. He is currently editing a manual entitled “Humane Alternatives to Dissection and Animal Experimentation in Life Science Education & Training: A Manual for Universities and Colleges” for Cambridge Scholars Publishing (CSP), UK in addition to translating in Hindi the world famous book titled “Animal Liberation” written by Peter Singer- the Australian Philosopher Professor currently at Princeton University, USA for Prakrit Bharati Academy; Jaipur, India.
Dr. Seema Kulshreshtha (Co-editor) Associate Professor and Head of Zoology Department at Government Shakambhar PG College, Sambhar Lake (Jaipur), Rajasthan, India, she received her Ph.D. degree from University of Rajasthan, Jaipur in 1989. She has quali fi ed University Grants Commission’s National Eligibility Test (NET) in addition to availing fellowships from Indian Council of Medical Research and Indian Council of Agriculture Research. She has worked as a Post-doctoral fellow in a National Fellow Project during 1992–1996 at G.B. Pant University of Agriculture and Technology, Pant Nagar,
Uttaranchal, India to develop an indigenous Dipstick Veterinary Pregnancy Diagnostic kit for farmers. She has devoted over 20 years in research and teaching Zoology and contributed papers in national and international journals. She has com-pleted a research project on the study of wetland birds of Sambhar Salt lake Rajasthan. The areas of her research interests include Immunology, Reproductive Physiology and Biodiversity conservation and management.
About the Editors
525
Dr. Asad R. Rahmani (Co-editor) An eminent ornithologist of international repute, after his PhD on fi sh, he joined the Bombay Natural History Society where he was Senior Scientist (BNHS) and Project Scientist of Endangered Species Project, Principal Investigator of Grassland Ecology Project and Stork Ecology Project. In 1992, he joined Centre of Wildlife and Ornithology, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh where he became Chairman. In 1997, he rejoined BNHS as Director. He has published more than 160 research papers and 250 popular articles, authored nine books and has submitted more than 30 project tech-
nical reports to the Government of India and funding agencies. Currently, he is a Global Council member of Birdlife International, UK, and Chairman of BirdLife Asia Council. He serves in many national and state wildlife committees, such as the National Board for Wildlife, Wetland Committee, Bustard Task Force of the Ministry of Environment and Forests. He has been a research guide to ten Ph.D. students and Executive Editor of Journal of Bombay Natural History Society , and two popular magazines of BNHS, Mistnet and Hornbill. Presently, he is working as the Director, BNHS-India, which is a leading institution of India known the world over for high quality of research on wildlife and environment.
About the Editors