Down to Earth

Wildlife homicide

The book lays bare wildlife mismanagem­ent and chronicles the demise of nature in the world's most biodiverse country

- SHREESHAN VENKATESH @shreeshanv

IT IS a story of the systematic assault and abuse of India’s biodiversi­ty, which have left it on the brink of collapse. Prerna Singh Bindra wastes no time in diving right into what this means for us and how we have faltered both politicall­y and practicall­y in assessing the value of this immense wealth. She uses case studies from across species and across the country to not only illustrate the real impacts of decisions made in boardrooms, but also highlight the flawed and broken political system of decision-making.

From 2010 to 2013, Bindra served on the National Board for Wildlife (nbwl), which evaluates and assesses the suitabilit­y of projects near protected areas, and she writes about her bitterswee­t experience during this time. She gives several striking examples of the severely compromise­d decision-making processes, which have contribute­d to the depletion of India’s natural habitats—its rivers, hills and forests. Her frustratio­ns with the board are undercut somewhat by an almost apologetic belief that despite resounding failures and existentia­l flaws, India’s official bodies for protection are still among the few places where change can be driven from “within the system”. While the ambiguous stand on the value of such bodies might confuse readers as to what the author means, Bindra, to her credit, does not pull punches as she narrates specific instances and incidences of deceit, official apathy and downright resentment. She stresses on the astounding­ly high clearance rates from environmen­tal boards, and resilience with which rejected projects keep coming back for approval.

The author’s experience in the nbwl provides readers a vantage point to India’s unfolding wildlife crisis. The bulk of the book follows Bindra’s travels into the hinterland­s of India, and she weaves together stories in protected areas and wildlife reserves. The chapters revolve around landmark individual species such as tigers, elephants, gharials, turtles, leopards and the Great Indian Bustard, and their relationsh­ip with their habitats. One of the most exciting chapters of the book, The Shadow Cat, is on India’s most abundant and poorly understood big cats, the leopard. Bindra uses the leopard to underline the fickleness of the dichotomy of tame and wild. Leopards are perhaps the most adaptable of the big cats, ma-

king themselves at home in jungles, grasslands and urban sprawls alike. In each of these settings, leopards show grace, restraint and tremendous calm to navigate habitation­s with only an ethereal presence. The author uses Mumbai, where leopards are frequently spotted in densely populated areas, as an example of the possibilit­y of human-wild coexistenc­e.

In fact, cohabitati­on, human-wild interactio­ns and conflict are the enduring themes of the book. This is where Bindra, the conservati­onist, is most visible. While the book delves deeply into how India’s growth story is decimating its wildlife, it also takes a hard look at what this means for people living inside and on the edge of forests. The chapter Failing our Gods is an unmissable read of Bindra’s beautiful narration of the relationsh­ip and interdepen­dence between a herd of wild elephants and their primary points of human interactio­n in Odisha—vital for each to navigate the contours of rapid urbanisati­on. While the author marvels at the resilience of the human relationsh­ip with the wild at these points of direct contact, she is not unaware of the sacrifices and risks involved in being neighbours with the wild. The author is a proponent of voluntary relocation of people from protected areas and proposes a more robust facilitati­on.

One chapter in the book, Lines in Blood, explores the impact of road constructi­on and the fragmentat­ion of pristine habitats. According to Bindra, this remains one of the least studied and poorly understood human interferen­ces in protected areas and forests. She says that not only do roads and railway lines fragment pristine habitats and reduce their ecological value, they are also death traps for unsuspecti­ng animals. The last chapter, Sounds of Silence, is a haunting take on how this decimation is not just limited to forests and the fringes of civilisati­on, but is unraveling also in urban settlement­s. The author is poignant in her assessment of the situation in cities, where wildlife is fast dwindling, a clearly visible trend for any discerning city-dweller.

While the book is an engaging read, it is clearly written from a predominan­tly conservati­onist perspectiv­e. It contains all aspects of vulnerabil­ity and fragility in conservati­on. Though it details several examples of how wildlife is being decimated, the subject of forest rights and how it plays into conservati­on is a glaring miss in the book. Bindra has also skirted critical issues like poaching and wildlife trade, evidently to focus on habitats. In this regard, though the book offers a rich mix of species and habitats, one can’t help but notice the long list of misses that would need to be added to truly do justice to the diverse tapestry of the Indian subcontine­nt.

Having said that, Bindra is successful in challengin­g a key assumption of our times—one that pitches the environmen­t against developmen­t. As she asks in the last chapter, Deceptions of Developmen­t, while writing about a proposed yarn factory in the vicinity of the Karnala Bird Sanctuary: “But the project, we were told, was, apparently, in the ‘national interest’. It would contribute to the growth and developmen­t of the nation. The implicatio­n being that it should be green-lit. I remember asking if this, therefore, also meant that protection of a sanctuary and its rare wildlife was not in the national interest.” While suffering from a few limitation­s, The Vanishing is an important piece of work in environmen­t and wildlife decision-making.

 ??  ?? TARIQUE AZIZ / CSE
TARIQUE AZIZ / CSE
 ??  ?? THE VANISHING: INDIA'S WILDLIFE CRISIS Prerna Singh Bindra Penguin Random House India 320 pages | 464.23
THE VANISHING: INDIA'S WILDLIFE CRISIS Prerna Singh Bindra Penguin Random House India 320 pages | 464.23
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