HomeNewsEnvironmentWorld Environment Day 2023 | 'We have to know what we have even before it is lost!'

World Environment Day 2023 | 'We have to know what we have even before it is lost!'

Most mammals are elusive, nocturnal and difficult to spot. At a time when animal populations are threatened, Vivek Menon’s 'Indian Mammals' aims to help people understand Indian wildlife, especially its mammals.

June 03, 2023 / 00:37 IST
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A fishing cat feeding on fish (Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons Anirnoy
A fishing cat feeding on fish (Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons Anirnoy)

In December, World Wildlife Fund’s (WWF) Living Planet Report 2022 noted that the monitored populations of mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish had dropped by a staggering 69 percent since 1970. India has been impacted too. Four species of animals have already become extinct in the
past few centuries - the cheetah (now reintroduced to Madhya Pradesh’s Kuno National Park), the Sumatran rhinoceros, the Himalayan quail and the pink-headed duck. Forests and wildlife continue to remain under threat due to anthropogenic pressures. While conservation efforts are helping, awareness about our country’s biodiversity and urgent actions are required if we are to reverse losses.

Indian Mammals: A Field Guide

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It’s what makes Indian Mammals: A Field Guide by wildlife conservationist Vivek Menon an essential read. The latest update of the best-selling book features more than 440 species of both terrestrial and aquatic mammals.

Menon is founder executive director of the Wildlife Trust of India (WTI); adviser at International Fund for Animal Welfare; councillor, International Union for Conservation for Nature (IUCN); and Chair, Asian Elephants Specialist Group of the IUCN, Species Survival Commission.