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Illegal wildlife trade and habitat fragmentation that has increased human-wildlife conflict are threatening the wildlife across the Hindu Kush Himalayan region, an international expert has said.
He said that there is need for trans-boundary interventions to combat the challenges in wildlife conservation.
In a write-up titled “Sustaining our Wildlife”, he said snow leopard skins and tiger bones are frequently seized from smugglers and poachers crossing the borders.
This year’s theme of World Environment Day on Sunday is ‘Go wild for life’.
Citing TRAFFIC (the wildlife trade monitoring network), he said the estimated value of global imports of legal wildlife products annually increased more than twofold in 2009 – from $160 billion to $323 billion.
Painting a positive picture too, Kotru said more than two decades after the Earth Summit, there has been some progress in wildlife conservation.
According to Kotru, this proves that political will, combined with targeting poachers, sharing good practices and raising awareness can help local communities and conservation agencies to work together to sustain wildlife populations.
In the Hindu Kush, a mountain range extending west of the Himalayas, several ecosystems and the interfaces between them have been degraded and habitat fragmentation is common, said the researcher.
Habitat fragmentation has increased human-wildlife conflict in the Hindu Kush and the resulting crop losses and human casualties are leading to indifference and even resistance to wildlife conservation among rural populations, said the article.
Another concern, it said, is the expansion of rural and urban development, which is threatening existing bio-corridors.
“We need the right kind of interventions to be implemented on a larger, trans-boundary scale, with long-term consensus-oriented planning, implementation and monitoring that involves the local people,” he added.
The article says the landscape approach tested in the Terai Arc Landscape in Nepal and the Kailash Sacred Landscape in China, India and Nepal and the Human Wildlife Safe System Approach being tested in Bhutan could change the way that the authorities approach wildlife conservation.
(This article has been published in arrangement with IANS)
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