The Hidden Dens Of Karnataka’s Sloth Bears
If you ever stand at the base of a granite hill in eastern Karnataka, listen closely. The land will tell […]
If you ever stand at the base of a granite hill in eastern Karnataka, listen closely. The land will tell […]
November marks a transitional phase not only for people, but for wildlife too, as they navigate through shrinking greener patches
The forests of Pench Tiger Reserve in Madhya Pradesh are alive with the whispers of wind through teak leaves and
Wildlife SOS introduces a series “Things You Didn’t Know About” that explores fascinating and lesser-known facts about various species. Our
When a forest falls silent, the sound of a single cry can carry for miles. That cry came from a
In India, the survival of countless wild species hangs in the balance. Elephants chained in captivity, bears rescued from cruelty,
When Wildlife SOS’s Haathi Sewa initiative set its wheels rolling into Jharkhand this August, it wasn’t just another veterinary round;
For decades, sloth bears across India were subjected to one of the cruellest traditions imaginable, the practice of ‘dancing’ bears.
When Wildlife SOS launched Haathi Sewa, India’s 1st mobile elephant clinic, it set out with one powerful promise: we would
When it comes to treating animals, especially wildlife, healing doesn’t always begin with medicine. It begins with trust. At our
Straddling the delta where the Ganga, Brahmaputra, and Meghna rivers meet the Bay of Bengal, the Sundarbans is the world’s
At the very heart of Wildlife SOS centres, where rescued elephants, bears, leopards and other species find a second chance
When most people imagine a thriving forest, they picture a canopy of green, with dappled light filtering through tall trees,
In 2023, deep in the forests of the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve, a group of six poachers believed they could continue
At the heart of wildlife conservation lies a simple truth: people protect what they understand. When communities, students, policymakers, and
While summer temperatures soared across India, Wildlife SOS navigated diverse terrains to rescue animals caught in challenges specific to urban
India is a land rich in culture and heritage, and it is also home to breathtaking biodiversity. What is often
Hari, a 25-year-old male makhna (tuskless) elephant, had long been kept captive to beg in and around the Sultanpur and
Rivers may only thread across a sliver of the Earth’s surface, but they carry the weight of the planet’s biodiversity
Imagine a world where there’s no doctor to call, no pharmacy to visit, and no medicine cabinet to rummage through.