A new peer-reviewed study finds that tourism roads elevate stress hormones in wild tigers across Indian reserves, and tigresses may be choosing quieter zones for breeding.
wildlife tourism India
The Phato zone entry gate is named after a Van Gujjar settlement. On a December morning, what we saw on the road beyond it raised questions that no gate, and no permit, is currently equipped to answer.
IWN Daily Digest — Saturday, 18 April 2026 Four cheetahs from South Africa touched down at Bengaluru’s Kempegowda […]
Two Maharashtra tiger reserves are offering wildlife enthusiasts something rather extraordinary: a night in the forest on a […]
The jeep safari is India’s most popular wildlife experience. It is also, increasingly, one of its most troubling.
