Man–Animal Conflict: A Systemic Crisis in Rural India

Syllabus: Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation, environmental impact assessment.

Rising Human–Wildlife Conflict

  • India faces a growing crisis of human–wildlife conflict across rural landscapes.
  • Increasing reports of wild animals entering farmland and towns, causing casualties on both sides.
  • Farmers in Assam, Odisha and Karnataka frequently report elephant raids in paddy, sugarcane and banana fields.
  • A WWF–UNEP report identifies conflict as a major threat to long-term survival of key Indian species.

Drivers of Conflict

  • Expansion of infrastructure has sharply reduced and fragmented natural habitats.
  • Fragmented landscapes force animals to cross human-dominated areas for food and migration.
  • Agriculture near forest edges attracts elephants, intensifying conflict during crop season.
  • Villages near tiger reserves face crop damage by nilgai, deer and bison, leading to demands for declaring species as vermin.

Elephant Casualties on Railway Tracks

  • 186 elephants died due to train collisions between 2009–10 and 2020–21.
  • Assam recorded the highest deaths (62), followed by West Bengal (57) and Odisha (27), as per MoEFCC data.

Impact on Other Species

  • Vultures have declined by over 95% due to habitat disturbance, poisoning by veterinary drugs, and disruption of carcass-feeding sites.
  • Their decline has caused increase in rotting carcasses, rising stray dog populations, and greater public health risks.

Expert Concerns

  • WWF Global warns that conflict combined with other pressures has decimated once-common species and pushed rare ones towards extinction.

Government Response

  • The Centre launched the National Human–Wildlife Conflict Mitigation Strategy and Action Plan.
  • Focuses on addressing habitat fragmentation, corridor damage and retaliatory killings.
  • Promotes mitigation measures, data-driven monitoring, and stronger habitat protection.

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