WWF India’s conservation programme includes a priority focus on eight terrestrial landscapes located in diverse ecoregions. Conservation at the landscape scale involves working on various issues that directly and indirectly impact the landscape. This includes conservation-related issues (species and habitat management & and monitoring, addressing human-wildlife conflict, maintaining landscape connectivity, enhancing protection); social development (community empowerment, sustainable livelihoods); river basin management; climate change adaptation, as well as engaging with external drivers of land use change such as infrastructure development, agriculture production and extractives. Approaches include field implementation, research and monitoring, capacity building and institutional development, policy advocacy and engagement with multiple partners, including local communities, industries, government agencies and CSOs.
The Satpura Pench Corridor (SPC) connects Satpura and Pench Tiger Reserves in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh. The corridor has an area of approximately 4256 km2 and is a mosaic of forests and agriculture, with villages, towns, and mines dotted across the corridor and a network of roads and railway lines criss-crossing through it. This corridor has most of the drivers of conservation threats, including linear infrastructure, extractive industries, commercial agriculture expansion, and poaching pressures. Despite all the pressures mentioned, tigers and other large carnivores are still using this corridor and functionality has been established by recent studies. WWF India has been working on this corridor with a multi-pronged approach that includes engagement with the major coal mining sector for reducing impacts of mining, monitoring wildlife use of the corridor, occasional capacity building for field staff of forest divisions that form this corridor and promoting regenerative and wildlife friendly agriculture.
Agriculture Activities Implementation and Management:
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Coordination & Stakeholder Management:

We, at WWF, believe that humans can live in harmony with nature. In India, we’re studying snow leopards in the Himalayas, tracking tigers in the Terai and Kanha Pench corridor, working with businesses to develop green modules and with communities to find ways to reduce their dependence on forests, among many other projects. There’s a lot more that we do – and we need people with heart to help us do it.
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