Sunday, 31 December 2023

Rediscovery of the Golden Mole


Jessie, a South African Border Collie trained to sniff elusive ground moles out by the Endangered Wildlife Trust, rediscovered the De Winton’s Golden Mole, which had been presumed extinct! Here’s a new year reminder for humanity to do better this new year, because Jessie and the mole still seem to be hopeful about us.

I had the pleasure of working with the Endangered Wildlife Trust earlier in 2016, when I designed a mascot ‘Mwitu’ for their Painted Dog conservation initiative. Congratulations to the team for this rediscovery!

Comic from my column with The Hindu Sunday Magazine



Saturday, 30 December 2023

Extinct Species 2024


Say hello, well, goodbye actually, to five among the twenty one species to be declared extinct this year. While the Little Mariana Fruit Bat, Bridled White Eye, Molokai Creeper and the Flat Pigtoe Mussel were delisted from the US Endangered Species Act because of extinction, the Java Stingaree was declared extinct after a recent IUCN survey. 
Oh, and a very happy new year to us all, from the Flat Pigtoe Mussel!

Comic for DW Environment.


Wednesday, 27 December 2023

New Species of 2023


Newly discovered species from 2023 congratulate India's biologists for all the discoveries and rediscoveries made this year! Let's hope that our biologists will BRB with new ground-breaking science in 2024! Comic for Roundglass Sustain.

Plum headed Parakeet Make Up


Ever overdone your make-up and felt you resemble a Plum-headed Parakeet? Cartoon from my column with Roundglass Sustain.

Defying beauty stereotypes, it is the male Plum-headed Parakeet that likes loud make-up, while females prefer a subtle grey head!

The cartoon also ran as a caption contest on Roundglass's Instagram. Check out the winning entries here



Tuesday, 26 December 2023

The Nicobar Pigeon and the Dodo


Did you know that the Dodo's closest living relative lives in India? And that its genome may soon be used in the efforts to bring the Dodo back from extinction? And that its own existence, like all of Nicobar's other wildlife, is imperiled by the upcoming Nicobar Transshipment Terminal?

Comic from my column with The Hindu Sunday Magazine. 

Sunday, 24 December 2023

Serotine Bats and Sex


A pair of Serotine bats recently made news after being recorded on a church camera making love (you read that right), albeit ‘non-conventionally’, making them the first known wild mammals to indulge in non-penetrative fertilization! I know you all might claim to be such ‘wild mammals’ too, but that discussion is for another day.

Comic from my column with Roundglass Sustain. Read more about the church footage from Castenray, Netherlands, leading to a scientific report on the Serotine bats here.


Sunday, 17 December 2023

COP28 a Summary


A summary of all the 'phase-out' negotiations at the recently concluded COP 28 Dubai. Cartoon from my column with The Hindu Sunday Magazine.

Saturday, 16 December 2023

American Bird Nomenclature


A controversy is brewing in the world of ornithology and birdwatching, with the American Ornithological Society's proposal to rename birds with problematic eponyms, as many of these names celebrate colonizers and white supremacists. While many young birders support the decision, some old-timers oppose it. The Scott's Oriole and the Audubon's Shearwater have given their verdict. What's yours?

Cartoon for DW Environment.


Wednesday, 13 December 2023

Tuesday, 12 December 2023

Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve


(click on the image for a larger view)

In my first project for the forest department of my home state, Maharashtra, I travelled to Tadoba Andhari Tiger Reserve last year to create this illustrated biodiversity map of the park, where Gond culture and heritage meet some of the most iconic wildlife of Central India, making it a jewel of the heartland. The richness of Madia Gond heritage reflects in the unique stone pillars used for relaying announcements during royal processions, still preserved within the tiger reserve. Nowhere else has the intertwining of nature and humankind been iconified as distinctively as in Tadoba, where sculptures of tigers chained with the victims of human animal conflict are placed commonly in the peripheries of villages surrounding the park.

While Tadoba's teak, ain and baheda forests offer refuge to tigers, leopards, sloth bears, dholes, honey badgers, small cats and a variety of herbivores like the Gaur and Sambar, its lakes are home to mugger crocodiles and a healthy population of the near-threatened Grey-headed Fish Eagle, making the reserve an eco-tourism hotspot. I hope that the map illustration succeeds in sensitizing state authorities about the biodiversity that the park abounds with, and in serving as a reminder of all that is threatened by the expansion of mining operations and roadways in the region. The map will be on display and available as souvenirs at the park's museums and interpretation centres.

A huge thanks to Deputy Director (Core) Mr. Nandkishore Kale for giving me this opportunity, and to my Prajakta Hushangabadkar, a field biologist working in Tadoba, for guiding me through the project.

Here are some snippets from the map:












Sunday, 10 December 2023

Switzerland Wolf Culling


Peaceful Switzerland. Neutral Switzerland. WILD Switzerland! Cartoon from my column with The Hindu on Switzerland's controversial wolf cull, starring Environment Minister Albert Rosti. Amidst major efforts to rewild Europe, the concept of co-existence, like always, seems to be eluding the continent.

Wednesday, 6 December 2023

Live Cartoons at COP28 with the Global Resilience Partnership






Live cartoons done for the Global Resilience Partnership's Cop Resilience Hub sessions at COP28. These are from the session on accelerating access to finance at the local level, with speakers from Fundacion Avina, CDKN, CJRF and Indigenous People and Local Communities networks, moderated by Victoria Matusevich.


Live cartoons from the COP Resilience Hub's session on inversting in nature-based solutions, moderated by Conservation International.




From a session on building climate resilient health systems, moderated by ABT Britain.





From a panel on the intersections of climate change and food security, featuring a speech on climate change and the prevalence of female genital mutilation among the Maasai community, by Miss Climate Kenya, Dorcas Naishorua.



From the UN session on taking stock of climate resilience.






Cartoons from a session on investing in coastal resilience, with speakers from Ocean Risk Alliance and USAID.



From a session on the impacts of climate change on maternal and neonatal health, with speakers from Clinton Health Access, ISHTM UK and Human Rights Watch.


From a session on psychological resilience as a pillar for climate resilience, with speakers from the Clinton Foundation, SPARC India, ICLEI Africa and Susty Vibes, moderated by Haley Brown of Billion Minds Project.



From a session on biodiversity and climate resilience, moderated by the Natural History Museum of London.



Cartoons from a session on local and community leadership in climate adaptation, moderated by GNDR. The cartoon above was inspired by the inputs of Ms. Mehnaz, an officer at the Cyclone Preparedness Programme Bangladesh.



Cartoons from a session on bridging the gaps between technology , finance and biodiversity in climate resilience, with speakers from SEEDS India, and Resurgence .







From a session on gender, fisheries and climate resilience, with some eminent speakers including World Food Prize winner Shakuntala Haraksingh Thilsted , Suzanne Njeri of the Association of Women in Fish and Blue Economy Kenya, Corey O'Hara of USAID Mozambique, and Pamela Mayorga of the ECMPO Chile.




From a session on transformative leverage for biosphere resilience.