Wildlife conservation is often imagined as protecting animals from extinction or keeping nature separate from human life. But in reality, people and wildlife frequently share the same spaces, leading to conflict, trade-offs, and difficult choices. Conservation scientist Krithi Karanth has built her career around a different idea: instead of separating humans and wildlife, we should focus on how both can live together in the same landscapes in practical, sustainable ways.
Growing Up in a Conservation World

Krithi Karanth’s interest in wildlife was shaped early in life. Her father, Ullas Karanth, is a well-known wildlife researcher in India, and growing up around conservation work gave her a close view of both animal protection and the realities faced by people living near forests. This background helped her see conservation as more than just science—it is also deeply connected to human lives and livelihoods.
Understanding Human-Wildlife Conflict

A major focus of her work is the tension that arises when animals like elephants, tigers, and leopards share land with farming communities. These encounters can lead to crop loss, livestock attacks, property damage, and even safety risks for people. While conservation efforts often prioritize protecting wildlife, local communities often carry the immediate costs of living near protected areas.
Listening to Local Communities

One of Karanth’s key contributions is emphasizing that conservation decisions must include the voices of people who actually live alongside wildlife. Through large-scale surveys and field research, her work gathers real data from households to understand their challenges and attitudes. This helps shape policies that are more practical, fair, and likely to succeed in the long term.
Shifting Toward Coexistence Strategies

Instead of focusing only on protection and restrictions, modern conservation increasingly explores coexistence approaches. These can include compensation for livestock losses, early warning systems for wildlife movement, community education, and better land-use planning. The goal is not to eliminate conflict completely but to reduce it to a manageable level where both people and wildlife can thrive.
Conservation Beyond Animals Alone

Karanth’s work highlights a broader shift in conservation thinking. Success is no longer measured only by rising animal populations or expanding protected areas, but also by whether local communities can live with wildlife without being pushed into hardship. In this view, conservation is as much about social systems, trust, and cooperation as it is about ecology.