Choksi paper on restoration
Recent PhD Pooja Choksi provides a framework for people-centric restoration
Recent PhD Pooja Choksi provides a framework for people-centric restoration
DeFries participates in collaboration to reconcile multiple goals in landscapes across India, published in Nature Sustainability. Open source preprint is here. Summary of the paper is here.
Pooja Choksi’s paper on soundscapes in restoration sites in central India is published in Restoration Ecology. Press coverage is here.
PhD student Jay Schoen publishes popular science article on tiger connectivity in central India.
DeFries and colleagues publish policy forum on the land sector in the carbon market
Check out Sounds of Restoration from Project Dhvani here and here
Jay Schoen and Amrita Neelakantan co-lead a synthesis of landscape connectivity for tigers in central India. Press coverage here, here, here, and here.
PhD student Michael Levin was first-author on a paper “Using publicly available data to conduct rapid assessments of extinction risk” published in Conservation Science and Practice.
Sarika Khanwilkar was first author on a paper “Patterns of illegal and legal tiger parts entering the United States over a decade (2003-2012)” in Conservation Science and Practice. Media coverage is here, here, here, and here.
Phd student Pooja Choksi, along with Krishna Anujan, Sarika Khanwilkar, Vijay Ramesh, and Pooja Gupta won the Meridian Collaborative Grant from National Geographic for the project “Soundscapes and stories: a locally replicable model for conservation using a biocultural approach” to be conducted in central India and the Western Ghats