scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Nature Conservation Foundation

NonprofitMysore, India
About: Nature Conservation Foundation is a nonprofit organization based out in Mysore, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Biodiversity. The organization has 153 authors who have published 375 publications receiving 10202 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This report is the first of its kind to systematically identify gestures in any wild, non-ape species, thus providing a platform for comparative studies across primate taxa, particularly in the efforts to trace out the phylogenetic origins of language-like markers in the primate lineage, earlier than in the great apes.

8 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined vegetation responses to experimentally simulated climate change (warming, drought and increased rainfall) and grazing (clipping vegetation) between 2015 and 2018 at two mountain rangeland sites: Spiti valley, in the Indian Trans-Himalaya and Tost in the GobiAltai Mountains in Mongolia.
Abstract: 1. Climate over Asian montane rangelands is changing faster than the global average, posing serious threats to the future of the region's livestock‐based economies and cultures. Effects of climate change on rangeland vegetation likely depend on grazing by herbivores but the potential responses of vegetation to such changes in climate and grazing regimes remain unclear. 2. We examined vegetation responses to experimentally simulated climate change (warming, drought and increased rainfall) and grazing (clipping vegetation) between 2015 and 2018 at two mountain rangeland sites: Spiti valley, in the Indian Trans‐Himalaya and Tost, in the Gobi‐Altai Mountains in Mongolia. 3. Clipping and climate change manipulations interactively reduced vegetation cover and biomass but did not affect species richness. Treatment effects and their interactions varied between sites. In ungrazed plots, vegetation cover and biomass declined sharply in response to warming (18%–35%) and drought (20%–50%) at the two sites, and, surprisingly also declined slightly in response to increased rainfall (20%) at Tost. While the effects of climate treatments were largely similar in the grazed and ungrazed plots in Tost, they were larger in the ungrazed plots in Spiti. The decline in vegetation cover was driven by a decline in the cover of both forbs and grasses. 4. In combination, grazing and warming (Tost) or drought (Spiti) had sub‐additive effects, that is, the decrease in vegetation cover in response to grazing and warming/drought was less than the sum of their independent effects but greater than the effect of either manipulation alone. Of the two, warming had a greater effect than drought at the more arid site (Tost), whereas drought had a larger effect at the more mesic site (Spiti). 5. Synthesis and applications. Our findings show that future changes in climate, including just over 1°C of warming, could undermine the sustainability of pastoral economies and the persistence of wildlife across Asian montane rangelands. Furthermore, grazing by herbivores will play an important role in mediating rangeland responses to climate change; thus, pasture management in concert with local pastoralists will be crucial in mitigating the adverse effects of climate change on rangelands, pastoral livelihoods and wildlife populations.

8 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The contrasts between the trajectories of the two sites suggest that livestock-loss can potentially be reduced through the revival of wild prey, and accommodating counter-factual scenarios may be an important step to infer whether conservation efforts achieve their targets, or not.
Abstract: Human–wildlife conflict arising from livestock-losses to large carnivores is an important challenge faced by conservation. Theory of prey–predator interactions suggests that revival of wild prey populations can reduce predator's dependence on livestock in multiple-use landscapes. We explore whether 10-years of conservation efforts to revive wild prey could reduce snow leopard's Panthera uncia consumption of livestock in the coupled human-and-natural Trans-Himalayan ecosystem of northern India. Starting in 2001, concerted conservation efforts at one site (intervention) attempted recovery of wild-prey populations by creating livestock-free reserves, accompanied with other incentives (e.g. insurance, vigilant herding). Another site, 50km away, was monitored as status quo without any interventions. Prey remains in snow leopard scats were examined periodically at five-year intervals between 2002 and 2012 to determine any temporal shift in diet at both sites to evaluate the effectiveness of conservation interventions. Consumption of livestock increased at the status quo site, while it decreased at the intervention-site. At the intervention-site, livestock-consumption reduced during 2002–2007 (by 17%, p=0.06); this effect was sustained during the next five-year interval, and it was accompanied by a persistent increase in wild prey populations. Here we also noted increased predator populations, likely due to immigration into the study area. Despite the increase in the predator population, there was no increase in livestock-consumption. In contrast, under status quo, dependence on livestock increased during both five-year intervals (by 7%, p=0.08, and by 16%, p=0.01, respectively). These contrasts between the trajectories of the two sites suggest that livestock-loss can potentially be reduced through the revival of wild prey. Further, accommodating counter-factual scenarios may be an important step to infer whether conservation efforts achieve their targets, or not.

8 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2021-Mammalia
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assessed the density of mountain ungulates in Sarychat-Ertash Nature Reserve and its neighbouring Koiluu valley and found that the estimated densities of ibex and argali were 2.26 and 1.54 individuals, respectively.
Abstract: We assessed the density of argali (Ovis ammon) and ibex (Capra sibirica) in Sarychat-Ertash Nature Reserve and its neighbouring Koiluu valley. Sarychat is a protected area, while Koiluu is a human-use landscape which is a partly licenced hunting concession for mountain ungulates and has several livestock herders and their permanent residential structures. Population monitoring of mountain ungulates can help in setting measurable conservation targets such as appropriate trophy hunting quotas and to assess habitat suitability for predators like snow leopards (Panthera uncia). We employed the double-observer method to survey 573 km² of mountain ungulate habitat inside Sarychat and 407 km² inside Koiluu. The estimated densities of ibex and argali in Sarychat were 2.26 (95% CI 1.47–3.52) individuals km⁻² and 1.54 (95% CI 1.01–2.20) individuals km⁻², respectively. Total ungulate density in Sarychat was 3.80 (95% CI 2.47–5.72) individuals km⁻². We did not record argali in Koiluu, whereas the density of ibex was 0.75 (95% CI 0.50–1.27) individuals km⁻². While strictly protected areas can achieve high densities of mountain ungulates, multi-use areas can harbour meaningful though suppressed populations. Conservation of mountain ungulates and their predators can be enhanced by maintaining Sarychat-like “pristine” areas interspersed within a matrix of multi-use areas like Koiluu.

8 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used simulations to investigate and evaluate study design and generate a reliable estimate of density for a population of tigers in Thailand's Dong Phayayen-Khao Yai forest complex.

8 citations


Authors

Showing all 154 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Nigel G. Yoccoz7834524044
Núria Marbà6922917112
Raman Sukumar5620412482
Paul S. Lavery471517411
Stephen M. Redpath441285261
Teresa Alcoverro421174922
Charudutt Mishra351083985
Nicolas Lecomte281062265
Damayanti Buchori261654267
Kathryn McMahon26922019
Navinder J. Singh24562406
Anindya Sinha231141646
Samraat Pawar22692867
Rohan Arthur22601635
T. R. Shankar Raman20511176
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Conservation International
1.5K papers, 167.2K citations

87% related

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
5.9K papers, 363.9K citations

87% related

Wildlife Conservation Society
4.9K papers, 243.8K citations

86% related

The Nature Conservancy
3.7K papers, 202K citations

85% related

Center for International Forestry Research
2.9K papers, 136.7K citations

84% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20224
202148
202036
201929
201824
201726