“The Orans (a sacred, neighborhood preserved land) of our communities are like a courtyard of a home, the place we dwell and exist with nature. Wildlife is like our youngsters, they’re our accountability,” says Sharvan Patel, a wildlife conservationist from Rajasthan.
Sharvan (30) lives in Dhawa, a village close to Jodhpur — a area the place wildlife and people have coexisted for hundreds of years; however that delicate stability is more and more below menace. “Once I was rising up, I used to take my books outdoors and research in our fields. It was so frequent for deer to work together with those who I’d must shoo them away now and again. However in the present day, if my youngsters wish to see a deer, they must go to a sanctuary or a zoo. They don’t come to our fields anymore as a result of we now have remoted these lands,” he tells The Higher India.
Species such because the blackbuck, the Indian bustard, and even wolves as soon as roamed freely throughout the arid plains and open grasslands. Sadly, many of those animals have confronted a drastic decline in numbers. The wolves, as soon as considerable within the space, have vanished altogether, and the blackbuck is protected below the Wildlife Act, 1972, and listed as a particularly susceptible species by PETA.
Figuring out challenges, spreading consciousness
A major issue contributing to the area’s wildlife disaster is the air pollution of the Jojri River, which flows from Jodhpur to the south-west and stretches throughout the panorama for almost 83 kilometres. The river is contaminated with chemical waste and untreated sewage from each industrial and home sources. This has created a harmful scenario for wildlife, notably for animals that depend on the river for consuming water.
“We knew that the blackbucks have been consuming the contaminated water,” Sharvan says, “So we tried to cease them by organising some watering holes, however they nonetheless went again to the contaminated water as a result of they’d gotten used to consuming from there.”

The scenario turned much more dire when feral canines, now the one carnivores within the space, started attacking injured blackbucks. “The wildlife used to outlive right here due to the agricultural land, for each meals and shelter,” Sharvan explains, “however now these lands have barbed wire fences to guard the crops. These fences find yourself hurting the animals. The blackbucks, particularly, are sometimes discovered caught within the wires, injured, and since they’re trapped, they’re attacked by the feral canines.” This has led to an increase in accidents and deaths, additional threatening the already susceptible species.
In response to those challenges, Sharvan and his group have began engaged on informing and sensitising individuals. Each time they get a name about an injured animal, they make sure that to tell the individuals dwelling in and round that a part of the village. They present photographs and movies of animals which might be harmed due to these wires to the house owners of the farms. By letting them know the cruel penalties of their poorly thought-out actions, Sharvan makes certain to make them take accountability. And it’s however human nature to be thoughtful transferring forth.
Safeguarding the Orans
In an effort to replenish the lands, their group has additionally uprooted invasive species of Julie flora, and planted native grasses to create grazing areas for the wildlife. They’ve centered on species like ber (Indian Jujube), khejri, jaal (Pilu Tree), and kumatiya (Acacia Senegal), that are native to the area. “Chinkaras and blackbucks love ber lots, so we plant these yearly to replant the lands of Oran,” he shares.
Orans — sacred groves which have historically been protected by rural communities — play a central function in Sharvan’s conservation efforts. These groves are wealthy in biodiversity and sometimes embrace water our bodies which might be essential for the survival of native wildlife.
Certainly one of Sharvan’s important breakthroughs got here when he and his group started to deal with the problem of water ponds. “The ponds that have been alleged to be for the animals to drink from have been being dug too deep for them to succeed in,” he says. This made it tough for smaller animals, like rabbits, to entry the water.
Taking inspiration from the shallow saucer-like ponds he had seen at Tal Chhapar Sanctuary in Nagaur, Sharvan and his group, with funding from Intact (Chapter Jodhpur) constructed shallow water ponds within the Orans, making them accessible to a greater variety of wildlife. The outcomes have been speedy.
“After we made a video about how we had constructed these ponds, 30 individuals known as us from different areas, together with Nagaur, Bikaner, and Barmer, to ask if we may assist them do the identical,” Sharvan remembers.

To fund their work long-time, Sharvan and his group began a WhatsApp group known as, ‘One Rupee Per Day for Wildlife Conservation’. The concept was that if individuals have been financially invested within the trigger, they’d be extra prone to keep engaged and concerned.
“There are round 1,000 members within the group, and so they pay Rs 365 yearly for wildlife conservation,” Sharvan explains. “This has helped us elevate funds for plantation efforts, filling up watering holes and the removing of invasive species.“
Along with grassroots efforts, Sharvan has made sensible use of social media to amplify his trigger and have interaction with a bigger viewers. His Instagram web page, ‘Thar Desert Pictures’, has turn out to be a platform for elevating consciousness concerning the points going through wildlife within the area. Via this, he has efficiently used hashtags like #HiranBachao, #SaveRiverJojri, and #GodavarBachao to draw consideration to his trigger, even getting #SaveRiverJojri to development primary on Twitter.
“The extra eyes we now have on the problem, the extra probably it’s that somebody will do one thing about it,” he says.
In the course of the just lately handed Wildlife Week, they carried out a marketing campaign the place they made frames of assorted wild animals and crops and introduced them to high school lecture rooms, panchayat homes, and authorities places of work.
“If you go to varsities and ask the youngsters ‘what’s wildlife’, they’ll say it’s zebras, tigers, or lions, even when the children have by no means seen them. However when you ask somebody to establish a bustard, not many will get it proper. The native wildlife, as a result of it doesn’t have eyes on it, is silently depleting. It is very important make the youngsters part of the dialog as a result of they should take this ahead,” says Jagdish Pooniya, 32, an audit inspector from the Dhava Doli Wildlife space, and one among Sharvan Patel’s key collaborators.
Palms-on method to wildlife conservation
A significant facet of Sharvan’s work has been his relationship with the forest division and native authorities officers. As somebody who has labored with the division for over 5 years, he has seen firsthand the challenges they face.
“There is just one small room with one workers member, and so they don’t have the means to assist injured animals,” Sharvan explains. Consequently, he and his group usually step in to supply speedy help.

“We get about 5-7 calls every day, about one injured animal or the opposite. We both take our bikes or lease a automotive, and we go and see what the issue is and take the animal to be handled,” he informs.
Sharvan manages his full time job in wildlife conservation and farming, together with his efforts on the bottom. “Fortunately, I’ve a five-day work week, so in the course of the weekends, I do a number of this work. However since my job is to be on area and work together with the farmers, even that helps me get a greater understanding of what we are attempting to do by way of conservation,” he says. “However once I’m not there, different individuals, particularly my buddies, Jagdish and Radheshyam, deal with the whole lot.”
“Wildlife conservation is one thing that our complete neighborhood is dedicated to. However I particularly really feel for the Nice Indian Bustard, which has been declared probably the most critically endangered species of birds,” says 28-year-old Radheshyam Bishnoi. “By December, all of the water sources often dry up, so we recurrently refill 10,000-litre watering holes to assist birds — vultures, eagles, and bustards,” he explains.
To cope with the problem of poaching, Radheshyam has fashioned a neighborhood of individuals in poaching-prone areas. “Each time they believe any criminality, they contact us, and we contact the authorities involved,” he shares. He even organises birdwatching actions to additional fund his conservation work.
“All three of us have full time jobs. What we needed to do was set an instance that if we are able to do it, then everybody can take a while out and do their half,” says Jagdish.
Sharvan’s neighborhood has turn out to be an integral a part of his efforts, with individuals from surrounding areas like Barmer, Jaisalmer, and Bikaner becoming a member of the trigger. “All of us work collectively,” he shares.
Sharvan’s tireless efforts haven’t been with out sacrifice. One notably harrowing day, a farmer’s pressing name led him to a heart-wrenching sight. When Sharvan arrived, he discovered not solely the 2 deer trapped and lifeless but in addition the heartbreaking sight of one other deer helplessly ready on the opposite aspect of the fence.
“The deer has all the time been part of the ecosystem, coexisting with the farming neighborhood and the lands, and now it’s prefer it has been forged out,” Sharvan displays.
The wildlife that after flourished round them is disappearing, and it’s the accountability of the local people to step up and defend it. “It doesn’t matter to me if a sanctuary has 5,000 deer. I would like this place, the place I dwell, to be a wholesome ecosystem prefer it was earlier than,” he says, his voice crammed with emotion. “My biodiversity wants its personal plantation and wildlife, and all of that deserves to be protected.”
Edited by Arunava Banerjee; All Pictures Courtesy Sharvan Patel