Indian wolf finds place on IUCN's danger list; only 3k left in the wild
MUMBAI, Oct. 13 -- The Indian wolf (Canis lupus pallipes), one of the most ancient and elusive wolf lineages in the world, has entered the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)'s Red List of Threatened Species as 'Vulnerable', with only 2,877 to 3,310 mature animals estimated to be surviving in the wild. The announcement was made on October 10 after an assessment conducted by Indian researchers was accepted by IUCN.
The assessment, conducted between 2023 and 2024, represents the first formal IUCN evaluation of the Indian wolf. It was led by scientists across India, including Dr Shaheer Khan and Dr Bilal Habib of the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) in collaboration with Dr Yadvendradev Vikramsinh Jhala, former WII dean and one of India's foremost wolf ecologists known for his decades-long research on the species.
Researchers examined more than 10,000 locations across India and Pakistan where wolves were recorded over the last two decades, applying multiple habitat-modelling techniques to estimate the species' potential range. By combining viable habitat data with observed pack sizes, the team estimated the current population and identified Maharashtra, Gujarat and Rajasthan as key strongholds - together supporting nearly half of India's wolves, most of which live outside protected areas in grasslands, scrublands and semi-arid landscapes interspersed with farms and villages.
The IUCN assessment estimates a decline in the past three generations due to habitat loss, human persecution, disease and hybridisation with feral dogs. In Maharashtra's Great Indian Bustard Sanctuary landscape, the wolf population has dropped by over 41% between 2007 and 2023, equivalent to 3.1% annual decline.
Experts emphasise that protecting the Indian wolf is crucial for maintaining an ecological balance in India's grasslands, where it serves as an apex predator controlling herbivore populations and preventing overgrazing. However, Khan pointed out that their survival depended on the future of India's grasslands, which are disappearing rapidly under agriculture and infrastructure. "Currently, the number of wolves is even fewer than tigers," he said.
Researchers believe that the new IUCN classification could finally shift conservation and policy attention toward this long-overlooked predator. "Now that the Indian wolf is officially recognized as 'vulnerable', it opens the door to more research, targeted conservation, and stronger legal protection," Khan said....
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