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E-raamat: Case Studies of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation in India

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"This volume brings together a collection of case studies examining wildlife ecology and conservation across India. The book explores and examines a wide range of fauna across different terrains and habitats in India, revealing key issues and concerns for biodiversity conservation, with a particular emphasis on the impact of humans and climate change. Cases are as wide ranging as tigers, leopards, sloth bears, pheasants, insects and birds, across a diverse range of landscapes, including forests, wetlands, nature reserves and even a university campus. Split into three parts, Part I focuses on how the distribution of animals is influenced by the availability of resources such as food, water, and space. Chapters examine key determinants, such as diet and prey and habitat preferences, with habitat loss also being an important factor. In Part II, chapters examine human-wildlife interactions, dealing with issues such as the impact of urbanization, the establishment of nature reserves and competition for resources. The book concludes with an examination of landscape ecology and conservation, with chapters in Part III focusing on habitat degradation, changes in land-use patterns and ecosystem management. Overall, the volume not only reflects the great breadth and depth of biodiversity in India, but offers important insights to the challenges facing biodiversity conservation not only in this region, but worldwide. This volume will be of great interest to students and scholars of wildlife ecology, conservation biology, biodiversity conservation and the environmental sciences more broadly"--

This volume brings together a collection of case studies examining wildlife ecology and conservation across India.

1. Introduction PART I Resource selection in Protected and Non-Protected
areas
2. Prey Preferences of the Large Predators of Asia
3. Habitat Use
Pattern of Indian Leopard in Western Himalaya
4. Insight on the Diet of the
Golden Jackal
5. Blackbuck in Agricultural Landscape of Aligarh
6. Seasonal
Variation in the Diet of Four-Horned Antelope
7. Do the Niches of Sympatric
Sparrows Differ?
8. Avifauna of Suru Valley: Species Composition and Habitats
9. Indian Robin: Song Characteristics and Functions PART II HumanWildlife
Interaction
10. HumanTiger Conflict in Corbett Tiger Reserve
11. Ecological
Drivers of Livestock Depredation by Large Predators
12. Is Resource Sharing
Leading to HumanBear Interaction?
13. Bird Community Structure in Restored
and Unrestored Areas in Delhi, India
14. Impact of Grazing on Bird Community
in Binsar Wildlife Sanctuary
15. Insect Diversity in a Semi-Natural
Environment
16. Dipteran Flies Associated with Abuse and Neglect: A Forensic
Indicator PART III Landscape Ecology and Conservation
17. Conservation of
Pheasants in Jammu and Kashmir: A Review
18. Avifaunal Diversity at Baba
Ghulam Shah Badshah University Campus
19. Distribution and Conservation of
Kashmir Gray Langur
20. Forest Classification of Panna Tiger Reserve
21.
Wetland Inventory of Aligarh District
22. Web of Socioeconomic Considerations
for Nature Conservation in Manipur Conclusion
Orus Ilyas is Associate Professor in the Department of Wildlife Sciences at Aligarh Muslim University, India. She has studied mammals in India since 1995 and has worked in the high-altitude Himalayas for more than 25 years. She has worked on various projects funded by government and non-government organisations, such as WWF India and the Council for Advancement of Peoples Action and Rural Technology (CAPART).

Afifullah Khan is Professor in the Department of Wildlife Sciences at Aligarh Muslim University, India. He started his research career by investigating the ecology of Asian elephants and continued to work on mammalian and avian species and communities. His current research explores ecological patterns and processes at a landscape level and the effects of EMF on plants and birds.