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Farmers in Bhutan and India fear elephant raids, leading to crop abandonment, highlighting the need for conservation efforts.
Besides poaching for commerce, human/wildlife conflicts also exist because of the damage wildlife causes to agricultural crops and livestock. This often results in retaliatory killing of some wildlife ...
“Bhutan has become the last stronghold of the golden mahseer,” says Dechen Dorji, who heads the World Wildlife Fund’s office in Thimphu, the Bhutanese capital.
Wildlife crime or criminalization of farmers: The real crisis in Bhutan's forests. Jul 21, 2024 7 mins read. Crime. forest resources decolonised of locked content. offenses policy or against locked ...
Subsistence farmers’ understanding of the effects of indirect impacts of human wildlife conflict on their psychosocial well-being in Bhutan. Sustainability , 14 (21), 14050. doi: 10.3390/su142114050 ...
As Bhutan accelerates its infrastructure expansion, conservationists and engineers are grappling with a pressing challenge: how to develop without endangering the country’s rich biodiversity. As ...
And with Africa’s andBeyond importing their safari approach to Bhutan, wildlife, too, is in the spotlight. But more recently, there has also been an emphasis on homegrown hospitality, ...
Tiny Bhutan is feeling the squeeze as its giant neighbours China and India vie for territory.
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