India, April 10 -- Wildlife raids on Indian farms are stripping fields and pushing entire cropping systems.
But country lacks national database to calculate these losses.
New policy paper calls for National Human-Animal Conflict Mission and species- and context-specific action.
A herd of elephants passing through overnight can leave a paddy field stripped bare by morning. Boar tear through groundnut plots in a matter of hours. Nilgai and peafowl return week after week until little is left worth guarding. Elephant conflict alone was estimated to affect between 0.8 and 1 million hectares of cropland every year in India, touching nearly a million rural families.
In the Western Ghats, farmers growing banana and arecanut report annual loss...
Click here to read full article from source
To read the full article or to get the complete feed from this publication, please
Contact Us.