Popular articles by Kullu

  • A need to facilitate long-term monitoring of Caprinae in India

    Munib Khanyari and Kullu write in Caprinae Newsletter

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  • The Last Tiger of Ajanta

    As more and more tiger reserves get saturated and tigers move out into human-dominated landscapes, the future of conservation will depend on how we nurture this relationship (image: Kalyan Varma).

  • Take me home, said the Chumurthi horse I met in Spiti

    Kullu's love for horses is no secret. Here is his first article about horses for the Times of India.

  • Antelopes in my Backyard

    In this Mongabay-India article, Kullu uses personal experiences to talk about the need to build place-based human-nature relationships so that there is value and hence hope to conserve the wildlife outside protected areas

  • Let’s share our city: How to house multiple species within Urban India

    Kullu's article in the Times of India about urban ecology and how to make our cities wildlife friendly

  • Through a photo of the snow leopard

    Read how one of the first pictures of the snow leopard from Kibber touched the hearts of the local people

  • Trailing the Elusive Cat

    Lifestyle section of the newspaper DNA profiles Kullu

  • Day of the Shingu

    Read about how a pack of Himalayan wolves tries to outsmart a herd of blue sheep.

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Research in the News

  • Last Tiger by Eduardo Halfon is published in Spanish

    Eduardo’s article is published in Letras Libres in Mexico

  • Singapore based The Straits Times covers our work on the Indian wolf

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  • Indian Express covers our recent paper and conservation efforts on Wolves in Ladakh

  • Eduardo Halfon publishes The Last Tiger in New York Book Review

    Eduardo Halfon introduced Kullu for his colloquium at the Wissenschaftskolleg and that introduction turned into a story that was published by The New York Book Review

  • German Newspaper Der Tagesspiegel publishes Eduardo Halfon's story featuring Kullu

  • New article about our work in Scroll

    New List Item

    In Ladakh, an initiative to protect wolves is turning traditional trapping pits into stupas

  • Shangdong to Stupa: A prayer for the wolves in Ladakh

    More coverage of our Wolf to Shandong work

  • Mongabay India on our paper about Shandong to Stupa conversation for wolf conservation

  • The Wire article about our recent paper on wildlife hunting during the covid-19 related lockdowns

    Hunting May Have Increased During the COVID Lockdown

  • World Wildlife Day: A new study describes the success of a community-based conservation of wolves in Ladakh

    Media in Arunachal Pradesh covers our recent paper on wolf conservation

  • Report on the snow leopard population estimate was carried by atleast 9 different hindi newspapers

  • Where have the birds gone? on declining urban bird diversity

    Article in Current Conservation about our paper on Birds in Bangalore

  • Kullu photographed a Leopard on his farm and then social media created a rumour

    Rumour spread that this image of the common leopard is from a village close to Aurangabad city causing panic. The best way to address it was to go to press and say “I took this image and the leopard was far away from where the panic is.” (Article in Marathi)

  • Migratory birds declining, lake-dependent resident birds increasing

    “Migratory bird numbers are declining in Bengaluru, while many lake-dependent resident bird numbers seem to be on the rise in the past five years, a new study on the impact of urbanisation on bird populations in Bengaluru has found.”

  • Times of India Interview about estimating snow leopard population of Himachal Pradesh

  • Survey estimates 73 snow leopards in Himachal Pradesh

    “In Himachal Pradesh, the survey to assess the population of snow leopards was held by the state wildlife wing in collaboration with the Nature Conservation Foundation Mysore following the Snow Leopard Population Assessment in India protocols set by the Union Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change.“

  • Mongabay Indi: Scientific survey maps 73 snow leopards in Himachal Pradesh

    “Till recently, the hilly state of Himachal Pradesh (HP) was only making wild guesses about the population status of the snow leopard, the state animal of HP. After three years, the state has found a reliable population estimate of up to 73 snow leopards (Panthera uncia) in a first of its kind survey in the region that used camera traps and other scientific tools to reach the figure.”

  • Study shows migratory bird count falls due to urbanisation

    “They said the study adds to the significant paucity of studies on the effects of urbanisation on biodiversity in urban tropics”

  • Bengaluru's water birds thriving, migratory birds vanishing: Study

    “The pied kingfisher is declining. They nest in holes excavated on vertical mud banks. These banks have disappeared as the edges of our lakes are covered in concrete or stones to make them into walking paths,” noted scientist Kulbhushan Singh Suryawanshi…

  • Birds in Fall

    “Researchers weigh in on declining population of migratory birds in city, say Bengaluru lakes, if maintained and improved could help conserve”

  • Migratory bird numbers down in Bengaluru, finds survey

    “Authored by Ravi Jambhekar, Kulbhushansingh Suryawanshi and Harini Nagendra, the paper investigated how the number of bird species found in Bengaluru’s lakes is related to the size of the degree of urbanization in surrounding areas.”

  • The Leopards Friends

    The Tribune covers our eduction program