📢Attention! International students from developing Central, South and Southeast Asia, last date for applications to the MSc program in Wildlife Biology and Conservation is 31st January'2026 https://t.co/thPbxuYWm7
@NCBS_Bangalore@ncfindia@WCSIndia
🚨 Application deadline alert!
Apply for the MSc in Wildlife Biology and Conservation @NCBS_Bangalore@ncfindia@WCSIndia before 26 October 2025
Shape the future of conservation. 🌿 https://t.co/RfIBVgDPan
Are you an adventurous birder, who wants to explore the little-explored places?
Try out heatmap - the new feature in the MYNA report, to identify under-birded places!
Use MYNA today: https://t.co/yfnXW0jZSx
In light of the holiday season and numerous requests for an extension, we are extending the symposium submission deadline for the Indian Wildlife Ecology Conference 2024 (IWEC `24) to 15 January 2024!
To submit your symposium proposal, go to https://t.co/L5cYqpn1yB
The Indian Wildlife Ecology Conference 2024 is now inviting Symposia Proposals! If you are interested in organising a symposium on a specific theme in Indian wildlife ecology, we invite you to submit a proposal.
🔗 More info: https://t.co/L5cYqpmtJ3
🗓️ Deadline: Dec 31, 2023
The State of India's Birds film has been released! We guarantee that watching it will be worth 9 min of your time :-)
Do take a look:
https://t.co/dFbQk1wnjF
30 million observations of 40,000 citizen scientists allowed us to assess conservation status of 942 Indian birds. This year long multi-institutional project reaches it finale on 25 Aug with the release of 'The State of India's Birds 2023' report. Stay tuned for more information.
Want to become a CITIZEN-SCIENTIST? Birds or Bugs or Bees or Trees, take a pic of the biodiversity around... following webpages can help you publish your records, ID your observations & help generate crucial information about our biodiversity, one observation at a time. (1/4)
Among the 800+ species assessed in the State of India's Birds report 2020, only 7 showed a 'strong' long-term increase in abundance.
Among them was Indian Peafowl.
3 years later, what's your guess for the current trend of our national bird?
https://t.co/kjg0VRGtHv
We are looking for a colleague who is passionate about species and habitat conservation, experienced in working with rural communities, with experience and understanding of conservation, forest policy and governance issues in the Indian context: https://t.co/mLPu7F9llU
@JoshiYashendu tries to solve "The crocodile conundrum of Charotar" by studying the behavior and socioecological connections between human and mugger communities in central Gujarat Anindya Sinha NIAS, Tarun Nair @WCT_India
Nisha @nickel_salt investigates local and landscape factors that influence bird communities in and around tea gardens of the Terai-Dooars region of West Bengal Anand.M. Osuri @ncfindia Arithra Kshettry @WCSIndia