OUR TEAM

It takes a Team of Believers

What began as a three-member team in a small room in south Delhi in 1998, is today a family of about 150 professionals from diverse backgrounds – conservation biologists, scientists, sociologists, wildlife veterinarians, managers, lawyers, finance experts and communication specialists – but committed to the common cause of wildlife.

They are based in any of the 15 field stations in remote parts of the country and a central coordinating office in the national capital region. An Executive Management Team comprising experienced conservationists, scientists and managers provide a visionary leadership to the vibrant and enthusiastic WTI team. The Board of Trustees of WTI comprises stalwarts who bring together a collective experience of many decades in the field of conservation, education and management.

The Late Mr Ashok Kumar

Founder and Chairman Emeritus

Ashok Kumar, Founder and Chairman Emeritus of the Wildlife Trust of India, passed away on August 18, 2016 at the age of 81. It is not often that the term can be used without hyperbole, but Ashok Kumar was a legend. He made several game-changing contributions, particularly in the battle against the illegal trade in wildlife and its derivatives, during the course of a conservation career spanning five decades. Along the way there were many milestones: organisations built and enriched, criminals apprehended and prosecuted, habitats protected, wild lives saved.

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Perhaps his love for wildlife took root in the days of his youth, when he walked the Himalayan foothills of Dudhwa National Park. A conservation consciousness, he himself declared, developed when he was working with Tata Steel in east India, travelling often through the region, passing “through forest after forest” as he said in an interview to Sanctuary Asia. “I used to visit Simlipal often, and those forests with their elephants had me totally captivated.”

While still with Tata Steel he began lobbying and working for the creation of Dalma Wildlife Sanctuary near Jamshedpur, which was so notified in 1975 largely due to his determined efforts. A ten-year corporate stint in the Middle East followed, but even there, in his own words, he “began to look for ways in which to get involved with wildlife.” He helped establish the Dubai Natural History Society and, having discovered Dubai to be a major international hub for wildlife products, began the battle that would be his defining crusade in years to come.

He joined WWF India in 1990 with the express purpose of setting up an organisation, the country’s first, to investigate the illegal wildlife trade. Thus was born the Wildlife Trade Monitoring Unit, which a year later became TRAFFIC India. A slew of investigations and seizures turned the national spotlight on traders in fur, bones and ivory, who were operating with impunity at the time. One particular raid in Majnu-ka-Tila in New Delhi, still the largest-ever seizure of tiger bones in India, revealed for the first time the international demand not just for tiger skins but bones, and precipitated the national tiger crisis that has had repercussions in terms of enhanced protection of tigers and their habitats to this day.

He was a consultant to the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF) between 1992 and 1997, and Member Secretary of the Supreme Court-appointed Subramanium Committee that prepared the basic document on control of illegal wildlife trade in India, one of the chief recommendations of which was to create a National Wildlife Crime Control Bureau. He represented India at CITES delegations for over 25 years, helped found the inter-governmental Global Tiger Forum, and served on the Steering Committee of Project Tiger and the National Co-ordination Committee for Prevention of Wildlife Crimes. He was also a member of the IUCN’s Cat Specialist Group and Asian Elephant Specialist Group. In 1998 he helped set up the Wildlife Trust of India, an organisation he would nurture and mould for the next 18 years.

Through all this he remained the quintessential man of action, always on the frontlines. He was the sethji, the unscrupulous buyer of illegal wildlife goods, in countless covert operations, playing a very direct (and often dangerous) part in the arrest of poachers, traders and middlemen. He led investigations that resulted in massive seizures of tiger and leopard derivatives, bear bile, and even products such as shahtoosh shawls and mongoose hair brushes, drawing attention to the plight of ‘lesser known’ species and virtually unknown facets of the wildlife trade.

While he was not a trained lawyer he specialised in Wildlife Law at the policy and practice level. He was something of a serial litigator, filing PIL after PIL to ensure that people involved with and issues related to the illegal wildlife trade were placed squarely in the spotlight. He fought and won several noteworthy cases – be it saving the wetlands in UP from a World Bank funded construction project, procuring orders to move an irrigation colony out of Corbett NP, or keeping the infamous poacher and wildlife trade kingpin Sansar Chand behind bars – and even argued some cases personally in the Delhi High Court.

He came to be known among conservationists as the father of wildlife crime control in India. Indeed, it is said that the term ‘wildlife crime’ would not have existed in the country but for his efforts.

Vivek Menon

Founder, Trustee and Executive Director

Vivek Menon is a wildlife conservationist, environmental commentator, author and photographer with a passion for elephants. He has been part of the founding of five environmental & nature conservation organisations in India.  The winner of the 2001 Rufford Award for International Conservation for his work to save the Asian elephant, Menon is the Founder and Executive Director of the Wildlife Trust of India as well as Senior Advisor to the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

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In India, he plays a role in advising the government on natural heritage conservation as a part of several committees including the Project Elephant Steering Committee, National Wildlife Action Plan Committee, CITES Advisory Committee and the Governing Council of the Central Zoo Authority. He is a member of four State Advisory Boards for Wildlife and an Honorary Wildlife Warden of Delhi. In the interphase between business and Biodiversity, he is the Co-Chair of Leaders for Nature, IUCN and an Advisory Council Member of the CII-ITC Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Development.

Internationally, he is the Chairperson of the IUCN SSC Asian Elephant Specialist Group and a member of the Species Survival Commission of the IUCN, on the International Jury of the Future for Nature Awards (Netherlands) and an Advisor of the Marjan Centre of Kings College, London. In the past, he has served as a consultant to the Kenya Wildlife Services and helped establish the first elephant reserve of Myanmar.  He has trained wildlife officers of over fifty countries in wildlife crime prevention and has attended CITES meetings for over twenty years as a Technical Advisor to the Indian delegation and as an observer.

He is also the author or editor of ten wildlife books including the recently published Secret Lives of Indian Mammals (for children), the bestselling Indian Mammals: A Field Guide, scores of technical reports and more than 150 articles in various scientific and popular publications.

Tara Gandhi

Founder and Life Trustee

Tara Gandhi worked for the biodiversity conservation programmes of several national and international organisations: Commonwealth Secretariat, London, MS Swaminathan Research Foundation, WWF and National Biodiversity Authority, also serving on committees of BNHS-India, Sάlim Ali Centre for Conservation & Ornithology, Madras Naturalists’ Society, and the Institutional Ethics Committee of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT-M). She conducted extensive status studies of Protected Areas all over India, including in the Andaman & Nicobar and Lakshadweep islands. The author of books as well as scientific and popular articles on birds and ecology, she is engaged in ornithological and wildlife surveys and works with volunteers for nature conservation.

EMERITUS BOARD

The Late Mr Ashok Kumar

Founder and Emeritus member of the Board

Ashok Kumar, Founder and Chairman Emeritus of the Wildlife Trust of India, passed away on August 18, 2016 at the age of 81. It is not often that the term can be used without hyperbole, but Ashok Kumar was a legend. He made several game-changing contributions, particularly in the battle against the illegal trade in wildlife and its derivatives, during the course of a conservation career spanning five decades. Along the way there were many milestones: organisations built and enriched, criminals apprehended and prosecuted, habitats protected, wild lives saved.

Read More

Perhaps his love for wildlife took root in the days of his youth, when he walked the Himalayan foothills of Dudhwa National Park. A conservation consciousness, he himself declared, developed when he was working with Tata Steel in east India, travelling often through the region, passing “through forest after forest” as he said in an interview to Sanctuary Asia. “I used to visit Simlipal often, and those forests with their elephants had me totally captivated.”

While still with Tata Steel he began lobbying and working for the creation of Dalma Wildlife Sanctuary near Jamshedpur, which was so notified in 1975 largely due to his determined efforts. A ten-year corporate stint in the Middle East followed, but even there, in his own words, he “began to look for ways in which to get involved with wildlife.” He helped establish the Dubai Natural History Society and, having discovered Dubai to be a major international hub for wildlife products, began the battle that would be his defining crusade in years to come.

He joined WWF India in 1990 with the express purpose of setting up an organisation, the country’s first, to investigate the illegal wildlife trade. Thus was born the Wildlife Trade Monitoring Unit, which a year later became TRAFFIC India. A slew of investigations and seizures turned the national spotlight on traders in fur, bones and ivory, who were operating with impunity at the time. One particular raid in Majnu-ka-Tila in New Delhi, still the largest-ever seizure of tiger bones in India, revealed for the first time the international demand not just for tiger skins but bones, and precipitated the national tiger crisis that has had repercussions in terms of enhanced protection of tigers and their habitats to this day.

He was a consultant to the Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF) between 1992 and 1997, and Member Secretary of the Supreme Court-appointed Subramanium Committee that prepared the basic document on control of illegal wildlife trade in India, one of the chief recommendations of which was to create a National Wildlife Crime Control Bureau. He represented India at CITES delegations for over 25 years, helped found the inter-governmental Global Tiger Forum, and served on the Steering Committee of Project Tiger and the National Co-ordination Committee for Prevention of Wildlife Crimes. He was also a member of the IUCN’s Cat Specialist Group and Asian Elephant Specialist Group. In 1998 he helped set up the Wildlife Trust of India, an organisation he would nurture and mould for the next 18 years.

Through all this he remained the quintessential man of action, always on the frontlines. He was the sethji, the unscrupulous buyer of illegal wildlife goods, in countless covert operations, playing a very direct (and often dangerous) part in the arrest of poachers, traders and middlemen. He led investigations that resulted in massive seizures of tiger and leopard derivatives, bear bile, and even products such as shahtoosh shawls and mongoose hair brushes, drawing attention to the plight of ‘lesser known’ species and virtually unknown facets of the wildlife trade.

While he was not a trained lawyer he specialised in Wildlife Law at the policy and practice level. He was something of a serial litigator, filing PIL after PIL to ensure that people involved with and issues related to the illegal wildlife trade were placed squarely in the spotlight. He fought and won several noteworthy cases – be it saving the wetlands in UP from a World Bank funded construction project, procuring orders to move an irrigation colony out of Corbett NP, or keeping the infamous poacher and wildlife trade kingpin Sansar Chand behind bars – and even argued some cases personally in the Delhi High Court.

He came to be known among conservationists as the father of wildlife crime control in India. Indeed, it is said that the term ‘wildlife crime’ would not have existed in the country but for his efforts.

Dr. M K Ranjitsinh

Chairman Emeritus

For the last half a century, Dr MK Ranjitsinh has been at the forefront of shaping conservation strategies for not only the flagship species but also for key habitats in India. One of his greatest contributions to wildlife conservation was the framing of Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, that laid the foundation for India’s wildlife movement. He was the Member Secretary of the task force that put together Project Tiger.

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His other significant achievements have been the key role he played in the first ever successful relocation of a village from inside a Protected Area, notification of over eight national parks and 11 wildlife sanctuaries and also the successful captive breeding and release programmes for all three species of Indian crocodilians.

Ajay Balram

Emeritus Member of the Board and Honorary Treasurer

Mr Ajay Balram is a business manager who was formerly Managing Director of Tate & Lyle Investments (India) Pvt Ltd. Having spent long years in the industry, he brings a vast expertise in management and finance to WTI. Mr Balram is also an Olympic judge in yachting and a well known theatre personality of Delhi. He represented South & Central Asia on the Council of International Sailing Federation (the apex body for the sport of sailing) for eight years and was awarded the ISAF Silver Medal for ‘Services to the Sport of Sailing’. He has had a long term interest in wildlife conservation.

Dr. Parimal C Bhattacharjee

Emeritus Member of the Board

PC Bhattacharjee is a respected academic and a retired Professor of Gauhati University. He pioneered wetland studies, primatology and biodiversity studies in north-east India. He is a member of several governmental and state committees on wildlife conservation including the National Biodiversity Authority (NBA), State Biodiversity Board (Assam), State Wildlife Board (Assam) and the Regional Empowered Committee (North East), MoEFCC, GoI.

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He has also served as the Director (Research Advisory Council), Vivekananda Kendra Institute of Culture and as a Visitor’s Nominee to Pondicherry University and Assam University (Silchar). He is also an erstwhile state level cricket player and was a member of the state Ranji Trophy selection committee.He has also served as the Director (Research Advisory Council), Vivekananda Kendra Institute of Culture and as a Visitor’s Nominee to Pondicherry University and Assam University (Silchar). He is also an erstwhile state level cricket player and was a member of the state Ranji Trophy selection committee.

Dr. Erach Bharucha

Emeritus Member of the Board

Dr. Erach Bharucha is the Director of Bharati Vidyapeeth Institute of Environmental Education and Research (BVIEER), Pune. He has been engaged in implementing a variety of environmental education programs for schools and colleges and for the public at large. Dr. Bharucha is a well-known wildlife photographer, he has traveled and studied Indian National Parks and Wildlife Sanctuaries extensively over the last three decades. He has also written a number of academic and non-academic books; Living Bridges: Folk Cultures of India, Then and Now; The Biodiversity of India; and Wonders of the Indian Wilderness are some of his notable works. 

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He has been a member and executive of such conservation institutions as the Bombay Natural History Society, Worldwide Fund for Nature, and Wildlife Institute of India.  He has also been associated with NCERT, SCERT, and UGC to further the cause of formal environmental education.

TRUSTEES

G V Prasad

Chairman

Mr G V Prasad is the Co-Chairman and Managing Director of Dr Reddy’s Laboratories Ltd. He is a Chemical Engineer from Illinois and did his Masters in Industrial Administration from Purdue University. Prasad is a Board member of institutions such as Indian School of Business and Ashoka University. He has also previously served on the Boards of IIT Hyderabad, S V University, Cyient and Acumen Fund to name a few. He is currently the Chairman of CII National Committee on Pharmaceuticals (2019-20) and has also previously been the Chairman of the CII National Committee on Environment and the Intellectual Property Committee (2006–2007).

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G V Prasad has recently been appointed as the Honorary Consul of the Kingdom of Belgium in Hyderabad. He was declared India’s Best CEO in the Large Company category by Business Today in 2014, and India Business Leader of the Year by CNBC Asia in 2015. Spearheading Dr Reddy’s Laboratories, Mr. Prasad is engaged in strengthening Dr Reddy’s research and development capabilities, supporting progressive people practices and building a holistic culture of operational excellence. His passion for wildlife and nature conservation is known as a supporter and board member of WWF-India (AP and Telangana Chapter) and on joining the WTI Board.

Vivek Menon

Founder, Trustee and Executive Director

Vivek Menon is a wildlife conservationist, environmental commentator, author and photographer with a passion for elephants. He has been part of the founding of five environmental & nature conservation organisations in India.  The winner of the 2001 Rufford Award for International Conservation for his work to save the Asian elephant, Menon is the Founder and Executive Director of the Wildlife Trust of India as well as Senior Advisor to the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

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In India, he plays a role in advising the government on natural heritage conservation as a part of several committees including the Project Elephant Steering Committee, National Wildlife Action Plan Committee, CITES Advisory Committee and the Governing Council of the Central Zoo Authority. He is a member of four State Advisory Boards for Wildlife and an Honorary Wildlife Warden of Delhi. In the interphase between business and Biodiversity, he is the Co-Chair of Leaders for Nature, IUCN and an Advisory Council Member of the CII-ITC Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Development.

Internationally, he is the Chairperson of the IUCN SSC Asian Elephant Specialist Group and a member of the Species Survival Commission of the IUCN, on the International Jury of the Future for Nature Awards (Netherlands) and an Advisor of the Marjan Centre of Kings College, London. In the past, he has served as a consultant to the Kenya Wildlife Services and helped establish the first elephant reserve of Myanmar.  He has trained wildlife officers of over fifty countries in wildlife crime prevention and has attended CITES meetings for over twenty years as a Technical Advisor to the Indian delegation and as an observer.

He is also the author or editor of ten wildlife books including the recently published Secret Lives of Indian Mammals (for children), the bestselling Indian Mammals: A Field Guide, scores of technical reports and more than 150 articles in various scientific and popular publications.

Tara Gandhi

Founder and Life Trustee

Tara Gandhi worked for the biodiversity conservation programmes of several national and international organisations: Commonwealth Secretariat, London, MS Swaminathan Research Foundation, WWF and National Biodiversity Authority, also serving on committees of BNHS-India, Sάlim Ali Centre for Conservation & Ornithology, Madras Naturalists’ Society, and the Institutional Ethics Committee of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT-M).

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She conducted extensive status studies of Protected Areas all over India, including in the Andaman & Nicobar and Lakshadweep islands. The author of books as well as scientific and popular articles on birds and ecology, she is engaged in ornithological and wildlife surveys and works with volunteers for nature conservation.

Punit Lalbhai

Trustee

Mr Punit Lalbhai from Ahmedabad is the Executive Director of Arvind Ltd. He leads Arvind’s Textile manufacturing, Advanced Materials, Engineering and Agri Businesses. An MBA from INSEAD, a Bachelor’s Degree in Conservation Biology from the University of California and a Masters in Environmental Sciences from Yale University is invaluable as he spearheads their initiatives in CSR, Sustainability and Innovation at Arvind. His passion for ornithology and conservation has contributed to building sustainable businesses that have the ability to impact ecology and conservation in a positive way. Mr Punit Lalbhai brings in a unique combination of youth, conservation knowledge and corporate governance to the WTI Board of Trustees.

Mrinal Pande

Trustee

Eminent media personality, Mrinal Pande has vast experience spearheading several prominent governmental and non governmental bodies. She is India’s first woman Chief Editor of a multi-edition Hindi daily (Hindustan , Hindustan Times Group) and is former Chairman of India’s national broadcaster – Prasar Bharati. She was awarded the Padmashree in 2006 for her services in the field of journalism, the Red Ink Lifetime Achievement Award by the Mumbai Press Club in 2014, and a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Press Council of India in December 2016.

Dr. Raman Sukumar

Trustee

Dr Raman Sukumar is well known as the elephant expert of Asia. He is a professor at the Indian Institute of Science Bangalore and has authored popular and acclaimed books on the Asian elephant. He is also an Honorary Director of the AERCC. Dr Sukumar was Chairman of the IUCN SSC Asian Elephant Specialist Group, and is currently Steering Committee member of Project Elephant, GOI. He is also a member of the National Board for Wildlife.

Dr. Mahesh Rangarajan

Trustee

Mahesh Rangarajan is an environmental historian with a special interest in human-wildlife relations in colonial and contemporary India. He chaired the Elephant Task Force in 2010. He studied at the universities of Delhi and Oxford and formerly taught at the Universities of Cornell, Delhi and Jadavpur. He joins Ashoka University from 1 July 2022 as Professor of History and Environmental Studies. 

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He has been Director of the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library and also Vice Chancellor of Krea University, AP. He is author and editor of several books, from his 1996 work Fencing the Forest (1996) and the most recent At Nature’s Edge in 2018.

Elias George

Trustee

Mr Elias George, IAS, is Chairman of KPMG’s Infrastructure, Government and Healthcare practice (IGH). He was formerly the Managing Director and Additional Chief Secretary of Transport of Kochi Metro Rail Limited and also served as its Director. As a senior IAS officer he held positions in several departments in the State as well as in Central Ministries. He retired from the Indian Administrative Service on October 31, 2016. Mr George has also served as Official Part Time Director at Cochin Shipyard Limited representing the government of Kerala, and has served on the boards of Central Government PSUs like SAIL, RINL and MSTC.

Kaushik Barua

Trustee

Kaushik Barua is a well-known entrepreneur and wildlife conservationist based in Guwahati, Assam. Besides enterprises that range from manufacturing of electromechanical goods, to supply chain logistics, construction and investments, he has founded the Assam Elephant Foundation which works towards the welfare and conservation of Asian elephants – both in-situ and ex-situ. Barua is a fourth-generation elephant owner whose love and dedication to elephants has made him a household name in the northeast.

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Kaushik Barua has served Assam as Honorary Wildlife Warden. He is a member of IUCN’s Asian Elephant Specialist Group, Assam’s State Board for Wildlife and Elephant Task Force. Barua is a key member of the ‘Indian Rhino Vision 2.0’ Team where he is responsible for planning out translocation operations. He has collaborated with the Forest Departments of Assam and West Bengal in various rescue and radio collaring operations involving elephants, rhinos, tigers and leopards caught in conflict situations. Barua is also involved in the training and deployment of Military Working Dogs for anti-poaching operations.

Dr. G. S. Rawat

Trustee

Dr. Gopal Singh Rawat, formerly Dean and Director at the Wildlife Institute of India Dehradun, has been actively engaged in teaching, research and academic activities since last 40 years. His areas of specialization include eco-floristic studies in the Himalayan region, Ecology and Management of Alpine rangelands, Status survey of medicinal plants, and Wildlife Habitat Wildlife Ecology. He has Ph. D. and D. Sc. degrees in Botany from Kumaun University Nainital and recipient of prestigious T.N. Khoshoo Memorial Award for 2019. He has over 300 publications including peer reviewed papers, books, reports and popular articles on a wide range of topics including plant systematics, habitat ecology and management of wildlife habitats in India. He has guided more than 35 Ph. D. and 15 Masters’ students.

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In the year 2004, he led an ecological expedition across alpine region of Western Himalaya from Indo-Nepal Border to Holy Amarnath and documented the status of alpine meadows, wildlife and high value medicinal and aromatic plants all along. His other experiences include working as Chief Scientist, Ecosystem Services at International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) at Kathmandu (2011-14), Member, Task Force on Mountain Ecosystems for the Planning Commission during (2006-08), Member of IUCN (SSC) Orchid and Medicinal Plant Specialist Groups and an expert member, Intergovernmental Panel on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services for the Asia-Pacific region. Currently he is a member of the Planning Board for Union Territory of Ladakh and member of expert committee for the management of Invasive Alien Species in India and Plant Conservation formed by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Govt. of India. He served as a Chairman of the Committee for formulation of Rangeland Policy for the Union Territory of Ladakh.

Dr. Rawat is the Fellow of National Academy of Sciences, Allahabad (2004) and Fellow of Linnean Society of London (2023).

Vivek Menon

Founder, Trustee and Executive Director

Vivek Menon is a wildlife conservationist, environmental commentator, author and photographer with a passion for elephants. He has been part of the founding of five environmental & nature conservation organisations in India.  The winner of the 2001 Rufford Award for International Conservation for his work to save the Asian elephant, Menon is the Founder and Executive Director of the Wildlife Trust of India as well as Senior Advisor to the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

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In India, he plays a role in advising the government on natural heritage conservation as a part of several committees including the Project Elephant Steering Committee, National Wildlife Action Plan Committee, CITES Advisory Committee and the Governing Council of the Central Zoo Authority. He is a member of four State Advisory Boards for Wildlife and an Honorary Wildlife Warden of Delhi. In the interphase between business and Biodiversity, he is the Co-Chair of Leaders for Nature, IUCN and an Advisory Council Member of the CII-ITC Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Development.

Internationally, he is the Chairperson of the IUCN SSC Asian Elephant Specialist Group and a member of the Species Survival Commission of the IUCN, on the International Jury of the Future for Nature Awards (Netherlands) and an Advisor of the Marjan Centre of Kings College, London. In the past, he has served as a consultant to the Kenya Wildlife Services and helped establish the first elephant reserve of Myanmar.  He has trained wildlife officers of over fifty countries in wildlife crime prevention and has attended CITES meetings for over twenty years as a Technical Advisor to the Indian delegation and as an observer.

He is also the author or editor of ten wildlife books including the recently published Secret Lives of Indian Mammals (for children), the bestselling Indian Mammals: A Field Guide, scores of technical reports and more than 150 articles in various scientific and popular publications.

Dr. Rahul Kaul

CEO 

An expert of international repute on pheasants, Dr. Rahul Kaul is the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief of Conservation at WTI. He spearheads the department that drives conservation impact in diverse projects including ecology, species, and habitat recovery run under his calm and effective guidance.

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Rahul began working for wildlife nearly three decades ago as a post graduate student in Zoology at the University of Kashmir, when he carried out biological surveys in Jammu & Kashmir. He went on to complete his PhD from the same University, studying the ‘ecology of Cheer pheasant (Catreus wallichi) in Kumaon Himalaya’.

“My interest in wildlife began after I attended an international conference on pheasant conservation, held in Srinagar,” recalls Rahul.

Before joining WTI Rahul was the Regional Coordinator of the South Asia Field Office, World Pheasant Association, for 12 years up to 2005. During his tenure, he initiated field study on status, distribution and ecology of Galliformes in addition to about 15 other research and conservation projects across South Asia.

Since then, Rahul has designed and conducted numerous general biodiversity surveys as well as species surveys in India as well as abroad. He has studied the status of the endangered swamp francolin in Dudhwa National Park, Uttar Pradesh, and has conducted rediscovery surveys of the critically endangered Himalayan quail in western Himalayas, among others. In the international arena, he has carried out biodiversity monitoring in Nepal, established monitoring protocols for galliform birds conservation in Sichuan district in China, and has also carried out surveys for the grey partridge in Southern Ireland, while working with The Game Conservation Trust, UK.

Rahul is a member of several national and international animal welfare/conservation bodies including the Central Zoo Authority, Government of India, Pheasant Specialist Group, IUCN/SSG, Partridge quail and Francolin Specialist Group. He was the co-chair of the IUCN/SSC Pheasant Specialist Group and is now the Southasia Representative of the newly-formed Galliformes Specialist Group. He is also a member of the Conservation Breeding Committee constituted by the Himachal Pradesh Forest Department.

He has authored an exhaustive number of publications. Among these are more than 20 scientific papers in national and international peer reviewed journals, wildlife reports, books, etc. Rahul has supervised many PhD students and regularly peer reviews papers for prestigious international journals. He is also on the editorial board of the International Journal of Galliformes Conservation.

Rahul recalls the creation of Kazinag National Park in Kashmir as a result of WTI’s activities as one of several achievements which gave him immense satisfaction.

AV Sathyan

CFO and Chief of Management

Sathyan, the chief of finance at WTI, is one of the organisations oldest members. He has the tough job of monitoring and recording the flow of money for all the programmes in WTI, and verifying the accuracy of those transactions. He calls WTI his home, and says the organisation means everything to him.

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Sathyan, the chief of finance at WTI, is one of the organisations oldest members.

A BCom graduate from the University of Calicut in Kerala, Sathyan came to Delhi with lots of dreams and ambitions for himself. “I worked as a programmer, salesman-cum-cashier, photographer, and agriculturist in different organisations before I started working in WTI”, he says.

He started his work with WTI as a secretary to executive director Mr Vivek Menon and over the years, he has grown to become one of the most senior and reliable members of the staff. S

Sathyan’s job includes monitoring and recording the flow of money for all the programmes in WTI. He also verifies the accuracy of all monetary and cash transactions and makes sure that all transactions are legal. When asked what he thinks about working at WTI, he says that WTI is his home and means everything to him. Besides his interest in work, he loves to watch cricket and all types of sports on television.

Dr. NVK Ashraf

VP and Chief Veterinary Officer

Dr Ashraf is the Chief Veterinary Officer and Vice President at WTI. He joined WTI in 2001 as the Coordinator of the Wild Rescue programme and became the programme’s Director in 2005. Under his leadership and supervision, for the first time in India, hand-raised rhino calves were relocated to Manas National Park from CWRC as part of IFAW-WTI’s rhino reintroduction programme. He also oversees rehabilitation of other temporarily as well as permanently displaced animals.

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NVK Ashraf completed his Bachelors degree in Veterinary Science (BVSc) from Chennai in 1985. As a veterinary student, he says, his interest in comparative anatomy attracted him to wildlife.

After working for a couple of years as Assistant Veterinary Surgeon with the State government of Tamil Nadu, he joined the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) in 1989 to do his Masters in Wildlife Science, which he asserts has been one of his most memorable moments. For another two years at WII, he was associated with several projects, the principal among them being the short term survey he carried out on the status of the Malabar and brown palm civets.

In 1992, Ashraf joined the upcoming Coimbatore Zoological Park (CZP) where he was mainly associated with Zoo Horticulture and Zoo exhibit designing. He was instrumental in re-creating four vegetation types of Western Ghats in the zoo campus, including the tropical rain forest.

He joined WTI in 2001 as the Coordinator of the Wild Rescue programme and became the programme’s Director in 2005. Representing WTI, he visited the Environment Public Authority (EPA) of the State of Kuwait in 2003 to help prepare a schematic design plan for a wildlife rescue centre.

His interest in zoological park management and exhibit designing once again earned him a place in IFAW’s leading five-member team commissioned for renovating the Baghdad Zoo in 2003. Here, he was primarily responsible for the re-designing of the avian and mammalian exhibits. He braved the vagaries of a war zone to help animals and believes that “no matter what one’s political ideologies are, animals caught in the midst of a conflict are innocent victims who should not be made to suffer”.

Ashraf is instrumental in the creation of IFAW-WTI’s wildlife rehabilitation centres, the Centre for Wildlife Rehabilitation & Conservation (CWRC) and Centre for Bear Rehabilitation and Conservation (CBRC), and the rehabilitation projects associated with them. These include rescue and rehabilitation of Asiatic black bears in Pakke TR as well as in Manas NP, Hoolock gibbon in Panbari Reserve Forest, release of hand-raised elephants in Manas among others.

Of all his numerous achievements, Ashraf considers “leading a large contingent of wildlife veterinarians, here in WTI; and through them, reaching out to animals in distress in different parts of India,” as the one that he cherishes the most.

Author of a large number of scientific publications, Ashraf is a member of the Captive Breeding Specialist Group as well as the Veterinary Specialists Group of the IUCN/SSC.

Jose Louies

Chief of Enforcement

One of the most versatile members of Wildlife Trust of India (WTI), Jose is the Chief of Enforcement and leads the division that handles wildlife trade control and litigation, arguably the most ‘glamourous’ positions in the organisation.

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A graduate in computer sciences, Jose started his career in a multi-national company, working as a network techie. For about six years, he spent time fixing computers, crashed hard drives, dealing with network security issues and teaching how to fix computers & install networks.

However, his passion for wildlife, that was evident since his childhood, took over. Things changed for him when he rescued a baby cobra with Snehal Bhatt in Vadodara. Soon, he found himself rescuing snakes and other reptiles in and around Vadodara, working as a volunteer for GSPCA. This lasted for two years, and then, he moved to Delhi.

“As a kid, I had all kinds of pets – a mouse, birds, and occasionally baby snakes kept in glass bottles hidden behind books in my room” he recalls fondly.

“I cannot keep track of how many times I tried to explain to my mother that the baby snakes were harmless and they are to be released in the wild. Each time getting good scores in the class was rewarded with permission to keep one more pet at home (the only clause….no snakes!),” he chuckles.

In Delhi, Jose joined Wildlife SOS, and started exploring various avenues of wildlife conservation. Eventually, in 2007, Jose joined WTI in the communications division. His knowledge of computers and wildlife in general, helped him grow quickly within the organisation. Soon, he was handling the Wild Aid Programme, facilitating Rapid Action Projects across the country.

Described by his colleagues, as an adrenaline junkie, Jose is not one to be bound in a desk job. He soon moved on to enforcement work to minimise poaching and trade in wildlife.

“I enjoy my work as it is round the clock, includes a lot of travel and occasional testing of nerve and wits,” he adds.

In line with his adventurous inclinations, Jose loves photography and biking. He also has a keen eye for online marketing, which he uses for some fund raising for the organisation.

Dr. Sandeep Kumar Tiwari

Chief of Conservation

A wildlife biologist and conservationist, Dr Sandeep Kr Tiwari has been working on wildlife research and conservation for over two decades. He currently works as Program Manager of the IUCN SSC Asian Elephant Specialist Group and earlier worked as Deputy Director and Head – Wild Lands, Wildlife Trust of India (2002-2016). He holds a Master’s Degree in Zoology and a PhD in elephant ecology and behaviour.

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He headed the team for the ground-truthing and securing of elephant corridors throughout India for over 16 years and co-authored the book that brings together, for the first time, a comprehensive list of elephant corridors across India. His areas of expertise include wildlife corridors (especially elephant corridors), human-elephant conflict mitigation, habitat restoration and policy. He is a member of IUCN SSC Asian Elephant Specialist Group, IUCN World Commission on Protected Areas, IUCN WCPA Connectivity Conservation Network, IUCN WCPA Protected Landscapes Seascapes network, IUCN WCPA-SSC Biodiversity and Protected Areas network and Conservation Advisor for Elephant Family. He was earlier associated with the Zoological Survey of India for over seven years as a researcher. He has authored five books and several scientific publications and reports. He also holds a doctoral degree in alternate medicine.

Dr. Rathin Barman

Chief Strategy and Liaison (North-East)

A wildlife biologist by training, Dr Rathin Barman has been associated with the Wildlife Trust of India since 2001. He joined as a manager. Rathin has been instrumental in the organisation’s growth in the Northeast and is currently Joint Director of WTI and Head – Centre for Wildlife Rehabilitation and Conservation.

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Rathin is an alumnus of Gauhati University. He did post-graduation in zoology with specialisation in animal ecology and wildlife biology. In 1998, he was awarded a doctorate for his research on “An ecological analysis of the wetlands in relation to waterbird diversity of Brahmaputra Valley, Assam”.

He has undergone a special training in Conservation and Management of Wildlife from Smithsonian Institution, US, organised by Wildlife Institute of India (WII) in 1994 and trained in Environment Education by the North American Association of Environmental Education in 1997. He also holds a Durell Endangered Species Management Graduate certificate.

Since the early 1990s, Rathin has been associated with a number of diverse projects in his home state of Assam and other Northeast states. He has implemented surveys of birds, studies and projects on human-elephant conflict mitigation, awareness campaigns, policy formulation and community-based conservation projects, in collaboration with agencies and institutions including Gauhati University, WII, and other local and international NGOs.

At WTI, Rathin works with a team of wildlife biologists on diverse projects including elephant corridor securement, human-animal conflict mitigation, and wildlife rehabilitation.
He is in charge of WTI’s Rhino Reintroduction Project that has successfully rehabilitated three handraised rhinos in Manas National Park since 2005, initiating the reintroduction of the species in the protected area that lost all of its 100-odd rhinos by the early 2000s. He also coordinates the Elephant Reintegration Project in Manas and Wild Buffalo Rehabilitation Project in Dibru-Saikhowa National Park.

“One of the projects that’s closest to my heart is reintroduction of rhinos in Manas. In 2006, the project began relocating handraised rhinos from CWRC. Releasing these rhinos in the wilderness was one of the most satisfying moments of my life,” recalls Rathin.

Rathin, along with Dr Bhaskar Choudhury, were key members of the team that established the Centre for Wildlife Rehabiltation and Conservation (CWRC) near Kaziranga National Park– India’s first wildlife rehabilitation centre near a protected area. Rathin oversaw the site selection, acquisition of requisite permits, and construction of the centre. He was its first Manager, serving for five years beginning in 2002. CWRC is a joint venture of the Assam Forest Department and International Fund for Animal Welfare – Wildlife Trust of India.

“Rathin was very crucial in the establishment of CWRC. He took care of all minor details including selecting material for construction of the building and overseeing the construction,” says a colleague.

Since his college years, Rathin has authored/co-authored a large number of scientific papers and publications. “Wildlife was a new field when we started out. During the final year of my MSc, a few friends and I decided that we wanted to do something different. We started reading and discussing wildlife issues, learnt birdwatching, and so it went. All of us are now established in this field,” recollects Rathin.

Known for his liaisoning skills, Rathin plays a key role for WTI in Assam. Several of his junior colleagues share that they have benefited from his leadership. Others vow for his puntuality, meticulous planning, hard-work, anticipation and prevention of crises, persuasiveness, his skills to convince people and his ability to get things done as required.

Rathin is a member of the IUCN SSC Asian rhino specialist group and threatened waterfowl specialist group.

His hobbies include photography and painting. He is also a good badminton player.

Dr. Samir Kumar Sinha

Head of Conservation

Dr. Samir Kumar Sinha has been associated with Wildlife Trust of India since 2003 and currently holds the position of ‘Head of Conservation’.

His areas of interest are Protected Area Management Planning; Participatory Conservation of Natural Ecosystems; River, Forest, and Grassland Ecosystems; species recovery through ex-situ and in-situ linkage, and landscape governance for nature and biodiversity conservation.

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With his broad experience and interest, he has successfully planned, implemented, and monitored conservation action projects in Species Recovery and Protected Area Recovery Projects of WTI. He initiated a few of the successful projects of WTI, such as the Valmiki Tiger Reserve Recovery Project and Gharial Recovery Project in the Gandak River in Bihar, and Sarus and wetland conservation in eastern Uttar Pradesh. Prior to WTI, he worked with Patna University on projects on the Ganga River Pollution Monitoring and Ecology and behavior of Ganges River Dolphins in Bihar.

He was awarded a fellowship under the Netherlands Fellowship Program by Wageningen University, the Netherlands and the Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), Bogor, Indonesia.

In India, with his wide-ranging expertise, he advises the Central and State governments on natural heritage conservation. He was an Expert Member of the National Governing Council, Green India Mission Government of India, and a Member of, Bihar State Board for Wildlife. He has been involved in tiger conservation projects of WTI and being a part of an expert committees constituted by the National Tiger Conservation Authority to evaluate Tiger reserves in the country he also helped the government in the country’s endeavor of tiger conservation.

He is a Member of the World Commission on Protected Areas (WCPA), Commission on Ecosystem Management (CEM) and Species Survival Commission (Crocodile Specialist Group) of the International Union for Nature Conservation (IUCN).

He writes articles in leading newspapers, periodicals, web publications, and scientific journals on the environment, biodiversity, and wildlife conservation.

Sunil Kyarong

Joint Director

Sunil Kyarong is an EMT member who is equipped with a degree in Zoology and has 25 years of wildlife and landscape conservation experience in Northeast India. He focuses on integrating traditional tribal conservation practices with the present science and reality. Building a strong and effective community conservation model in the tribal areas of  North-east India. During free hours Sunil loves to engage himself in adventure sports and games.

Sahil Mukesh Choksi

Sahil was introduced to wildlife and forests at a very young age which motivated him to actively participate in snake rescues and spreading awareness on snakes at a very early age. His interest grew with time so much that he decided to quit his 17 years of a corporate career and devote himself to biodiversity conservation. As time passed by this passion of watching wildlife and its behaviour had been so captivating for him that he passionately followed the same pride of lions for 13 years at Sasan Gir, Gujarat. Sahil loves to spend his free time in the woods with his son, helping him explore the beauty of nature.

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And as he fondly puts it, “humanity is called to shift to a new level of consciousness, to reach a higher moral ground… That time is now.” A birder by passion, photographer by interest Sahil heads the Development division at Wildlife Trust of India. He and his team ensure that all the projects are funded, run smoothly and supporters are updated well in time.

Aftab Ahmed
Assistant Manager
White Wood Winged Duck, Species recovery

Amitabha Choudhury
Programme Officer
Admin & IT

Amrit Govinda Menon
Manager
Planning & Wild Aid

Anson Philip
Manager
Finance

Antony Ngorang
Animal Keeper
Project Pakke, Wild Rescue

Arshad Hussain
Manager
Sarus Habitat Securement Project, Wild Lands

Bloch Farukhkha Husenkha
Manager
Whale Shark Conservation – Veraval (Gujrat) & Mithapur Coral Recovery,Natural Heritage Campaigns

Daoharu Baro
Assistant Manager
Greater Manas Recovery, PA Recovery

Debojit Saikia
Senior Animal Keeper
CWRC, Wild Rescue

Debobroto Sircar
Manager
WCCD, Enforcement & Law

Deepankar Barman
Field Officer
D’ering Dibru Saikhowa Elephant Link Project,Right of Passage

Doluk Dagang
Senior Animal Keeper
Project Pakke
Wild Rescue

Jeetendra Kumar Jakhmola
Programme Officer
Wild Aid/Admin, Admin

Kalpana Gupta
Assistant Manager
HR

Kaushik Deb
Assistant Manager
Greater Manas Recovery, Greater Manas Recovery

Keshab Pathak
Animal Keeper
Greater Manas Recovery, PA Recovery

Madhumay Mallik
Assistant Manager
Communication (Marketing)

Mahendra Bhojram Raut
Senior Field Officer
Central India Tiger Cooridor Securement Project, Right of Passage

Maheshwar Basumatary
Animal Keeper
Greater Manas Recovery, PA Recovery

Nazrul Islam
Senior Field Officer
Greater Manas Recovery, PA Recovery

Navroze Manekshaw
Field Officer
INL-UP, WCCD, Enforcement & Law

Panjit Basumatary
Manager
Project Pakke, Wild Rescue

Raghavendra Pratap Singh
Field Officer
WCCD, Enforcement & Law

Ramith M
Manager
Wayanad Conflict Mitigation & Kannur Kandal, Conflict Mitigation

Rudra Prasanna Mahapatra
Manager
Vets on Wheels & ERN Wild Rescue

Sameer Khazir
Assistant Manager
Kashmir Markhor Recovery, Species recovery

Sanatan Deka
Manager
Greater Manas Recovery, PA Recovery

Saymanti Bandyopadhyay
Assistant Manager
Campaigns, Natural Heritage Campaigns

Sethu G
Assistant Manager
HAWK, Enforcement & Law

Shajan M.A
Senior Field Officer
Wayanad Conflict Mitigation, Conflict Mitigation

Subrat Kumar Behera
Manager
Valmiki Recovery, Gandak Gharial & Kaimur Conservation, PA Recovery

Subiram Basumatary
Senior Animal Keeper
Greater Manas Recovery, PA Recovery

Yogesh Plawat
Programme Officer
Finance

Sameeha Zele
Senior Prgramme Officer
Wild Aid

Subhechha Tapaswini
Programme Officer
Planning, Monitoring & Evaluation

Sujnan MK
Assistant Field Officer
Wayanad Conflict Mitigation

Vimal Lakshmanan
Assistant Field Officer
Kannur Kandal Project, Wild Lands

Swathi Nambiar
Assistant Field Officer
Whale Shark Conservation Project, Natural Heritage Campaigns

Sanjay Singh
Senior Admin Assistant
Admin & IT

Arinita Sandilya
Manager
Marketing & Comms, Communication

Rajendra Prasad Mishra
Deputy Director
Central India Wild Buffalo Recovery, Species recovery

Tanushree Srivastava
Manager
Western Himalayas Mountain Ungulate, Species recovery

Shruti Chauhan
Field Officer
Terai Tiger Project, Conflict Mitigation

Sadhika Sehgal
Programme Officer
EDO, Planning

Neetu Mathur
Accounts Assistant
Finance

Monica Verma
Assistant Manager
Communication & Marketing

Neha
Accounts Assistant
Finance

Ramesh Kundu
Head Human Resource & Joint Director
Human Resource

Upasana Ganguly
Manager
Right of Passage

Pavel Ghosh
Field Officer
Wildlife Crime Prevention Assistance, Enforcement & Law

Pandi Karthik
Field Officer
WGaro Green Spine, Wild Lands

Apoorva Kumar
Accounts Assistant
Finance

Nitesh Kumar Singh
Programme Officer
Finance

Pranjali Bhujbal
Assistant Field Officer
Terai Tiger Project, Conflict Mitigation

Praveen Kimni
Senior Accounts Assistant
Finance

Dindi Padi
Field Officer
DDS-Arunachal Pradesh, Right of Passage

Bharat Kumar
Field Officer
Kannur Kandal Project, Wild Lands

Bhaskar Choudhury
Deputy Director
Wild Rescue

Deeya Bhattacharjee
Programme Officer
Wild Rescue

Ashish Chauhan
Accounts Assistant
Finance

Pratima Boro
Field Officer
Greater Manas Recovery, PA Recovery

Divya Mehra
Senior Programme Officer
Conflict Mitigation

Brajraj Yadav
Veterinary Surgeon
Vets on wheels, Wild Rescue

Kapil Chauhan
Field Officer
Central India Tiger Corridor and HEC Project, Right of Passage

Balsreng T Sangma
Assistant Manager
Garo Green Spine, Wild Lands

Samrat Paul
Field Officer
Sundarbans- Tiger Project, Conflict Mitigation

John Kunjkunju
Manager
Executive Director’s Office

Suranjita Roy
Field Officer
Forgotten Cats of Shergaon, Wild Lands

Priyanka Kathayat
Programme Officer
Executive Director’s Office

Harikrishnan
Manager
Species Recovery

Sreenanth K
Programme Officer
Communication & Marketing

Prosenjit Sheel
Assistant Manager
Sundarbans- Tiger Project, Conflict Mitigation

Mukesh Kumar Pathania
Senior Manager
Admin & IT

Abhishek Singh
Accounts Assistant
Finance

Sharath
Field Officer
Central India Tiger Corridor and HEC Project, Right of Passage

Subhashish Arandhara
Field Officer
Project Pakke, Wild Rescue

Swati Bhargava
Programme Officer
Human Resource

Sukanya David
Programme Officer
Wild Aid

Narendran
Assistant Manager
Kannur Kandal Project, Wild Lands

Zane West
Programme Officer
Executive Director’s Office

Hareesha Shasthri
Field Officer
Wildlife Crime Prevention Assistance, Enforcement & Law

Neha Singh
Programme Officer
PA Recovery

Abhijith Vijay
Field Officer
Amphibian Recovery Project, Species recovery

Aditi Dhillon
Programme Officer
Wild Lands

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