Born Wild Endangered

Born Wild: Fly away home (Aired: February 2007)

The village of Mangalajodi and the area around it is home to many species of migratory birds. But poaching has been the main stay for the people living in this economically backward region. Thanks to Nandkishore Bhujbal and his NGO, Mangalajodi has seen remarkable turnaround and birds here feel safe.

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About Born Wild Series

About Born Wild Series

Born wild endangered, is a special series that will travel across India, to explore the conservation and survival challenges facing some of India's most iconic species like, our national heritage animal, the Elephant, the common leopard and the snow leopard, the great Indian bustard and the Amur Falcons, the olive ridley turtles, the gharials and dolphins to name a few.

We will explore their habitats and the threats to the habitat. On the show you will not only meet the animals but also the people who are fighting to save them and the people who are affected by having the wild on their doorstep everyday as wild landscapes shrink across India. The show hopes to raise awareness on the trifecta of dangers facing our natural heritage, habitat loss, poaching and human animal conflict.

We will look for solutions, find answers and speak to experts on the ground. We will celebrate the fact that we are one of only 17 mega diverse countries on this planet and hope to emphasize why it's absolutely crucial to save this treasure. Not only is it our last bastion against coming ravages of climate change, while being our food, water and clean air sources but the wild is the essence of who we all are, at the end of the day, mammals who need nature to survive.

About The Anchor

About The Anchor
Swati Thiyagarajan, Environment Editor

Born wild show is produced with Gargi Rawat, News anchor & environment reporter at NDTV, and is the first long running series on wildlife and conservation on a news channel.

Swati Thiyagarajan has won two Ramnath Goenka Awards for excellence in environment journalism, the Carl Zeiss award for contributing toward tiger conservation amongst others.

Apart from the awards, she was also invited to be a jury member at WildScreen Festival in England, the largest wildlife festival in the world, also known as the green Oscars.

She was the first Indian conservation journalist to be invited on the Jury. She is also the only Indian conservation journalist to have secured exclusive interviews with Sir David Attenborough, twice. Her film The Animal Communicator has over 5 million hits on YouTube and she has just completed a book on her television series. The book is titled Born Wild and is being published in June 2017 by Bloomsbury India.

 

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