Turtle Conservation in India: Making Progress
Posted at 11:23 am January 26, 2010 by Brian Horne
Brian photographs the placing of the education center's corner stone. The ceremony includes burning incense and giving candied buffalo-milk sweets to the Hindu gods.
As conservationists, we often tell the tale of horrible environmental woes (for example, continuing deforestation of tropical rain forests, the cruelties of illegal wildlife trade, and feasible catastrophic climate changes) as a call to action, and perhaps if we are lucky, a bit of fund-raising as well. However, all too often we overly focus this message on the negative and fail to highlight the gains (both small and monumental) we have recently achieved in our struggles against the loss of biodiversity. This negativity has left many people greatly fatigued and despondent. So much so that many are “throwing in the towel” and are now glumly resigned to the misperception that our conservation efforts are merely postponing the inevitable mass extinction of countless plant and animal species.
I find this phenomenon eerily similar to a combination or, perhaps more aptly termed fusion, of two classic children’s stories: The Boy Who Cried Wolf and Chicken Little. We as conservationists have to be weary of continually “crying wolf” to the point that our message falls onto deaf ears. We also must be aware of how overly pessimistic claims that the “sky is falling” adversely influences the psyche of the general public.
Call me young and naïve, but I still think we can make a difference and that small actions today can have long-term positive conservation impacts.
I, as well as others, have worked hard over the past three years to develop numerous collaborations that will ensure continued project funding for the conservation of the red-crowned roof turtles in India well into the future. Nevertheless, the true measure of this project’s success will not only be self-sustaining populations of turtles within protected areas but also the legacy of the project’s capacity building. The project is currently funding the dissertation research of three Indian graduate students. Their projects range from turtle spatial ecology (the study of how the animals move within their habitats) to socio-economic surveys of the area’s impoverished people, who are dependent on utilizing natural resources in a manner that may be negatively impacting turtle populations.

The new education center becomes a reality.
The combination of both the adolescent and the adult education programs ensures both short-term and long-term project success. I am confident that the red-crowned roof turtle conservation project is, and will continue to shape, the future of turtle conservation positively for years to come, and I hope that my colleagues will find inspiration and optimism in this project.
Brian Horne is a postdoctoral fellow for the San Diego Zoo’s Institute for Conservation Research.
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January 26th, 2010 at 5:47 pm
Good job mate, keep up the good work!
January 27th, 2010 at 5:47 am
Fantastic piece!! Negativity and hopelessness never gets us anywhere. Keep fighting the good fight!!
January 28th, 2010 at 12:34 pm
Don’t give up, the turtles need you.
January 29th, 2010 at 11:06 am
Thank you for a great article on conservation and the struggle to keep it relevent. Please keep fighting and others will join you!
February 2nd, 2010 at 12:42 pm
Sometimes indeed it feels like we’re losing ground despite our best efforts, with overwhelming odds stacked up against the species that are dear to us. But even if we’re pushed back a step or two while stepping two steps forward, we’ve made progress or at least held steady for now; if we don’t make the effort, we (and the species) will definitely lose out. Keep up Brian and team, you’re making a real difference now and for the future!
February 18th, 2010 at 8:04 am
Brian, what a great article. This sounds like a perfect position for you! Glad you are there. I think efforts like these can pay off as much for community engagement and education as they do for the conservation of the targeted species–both are very worthwhile goals. Let us know if you are ever back in this part of Virginia–would be great to have you give a seminar here.