Griffins International School, Kharagpur recently organized a virtual interactive session with notable Wildlife Biologist & Conservation...
Griffins International School, Kharagpur recently organized a virtual interactive session with notable Wildlife Biologist & Conservation Scientist Dr. Ravi Chellam, CEO, Metastring Foundation and Member, Biodiversity Collaborative, on the topic ‘Conservation of Threatened Species’. The session focussed on the perils of extinction in the wild due to human action and the importance of Wildlife Conservation.
During
the session, Dr. Chellam, who had also served as an expert adviser to the
Amicus Curiae of the Forest Bench of the Supreme Court of India, talked about
threatened species, explained the importance of conservation and elaborated on
how these threatened species need collaborative and collective participation of
scientists, government and everyone to create a balanced ecosystem. He
especially urged the students to help spread awareness about biodiversity
and ecological balance. In his deliberation, he explicitly emphasised Great
Indian Bustard, Marine Turtles, Gharials of fresh water and Asiatic Lion.
The
most engaging discussion was on translocation of some Asiatic Lions from Gir
Forest to Kuno Wildlife Sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh
to create a second home to secure it from extinction due to any catastrophe
especially diseases. Students were informed about the Supreme Court order of
April 2013 in favour of translocation of some Lions to protect the species.
The
session inspired everybody present in the webinar and Abishek Kumar Yadav, academic director of Griffins International School confirmed that the school
would actively participate in the movement of conservation of Asiatic Lion. GIS
as a school would initiate a sincere communication with the PMO to give it a
momentum.
Dr Ravi Chellam emphasised Rachel Carson's words - "In nature, nothing exists
alone" and
said ‘I urge students to think about and reflect on human action. We adults
often think that human beings are beyond nature or outside of nature. But
without nature human beings will not exist. The Pandemic in many ways has given
us a good lesson to understand the fact that we must learn to work with nature,
respect nature and conserve it. Students’ intervention is very important in
wildlife conservation. When the students take it as an important topic and start
bringing nature, environment conservation, biodiversity as a part of mainstream
conversation, things will change and will enable people to realise the value,
importance and beauty of nature”.
“The richness that nature has given us is unique and it is
something we need to celebrate. Like we celebrate our culture, literature,
language, food & festivals. We should celebrate our biodiversity” further
added Dr Ravi Chellam, who is also on the expert committee appointed by the
Supreme Court to help with the translocation of Asiatic Lions.
Abishek Yadav said, “We are delighted to have Dr. Chellam for such an informative and engaging session. Our students are excited after attending this insightful talk. He enlightened us on many pressing issues of threatened species and shared many unknown facts with us. Learning these facts will help us become more aware of the ecosystem. The easiest way to help endangered species is to learn more about those vulnerable species. The more we know about wildlife conservation the more we can focus on how best we can preserve the environment. We will engage our students to build up some momentum and try to start a campaign about Asiatic Lions and support the cause of preserving the beautiful earth for future generations”.
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