{"id":2185,"date":"2026-05-28T09:28:35","date_gmt":"2026-05-28T09:28:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/?page_id=2185"},"modified":"2026-05-28T09:32:00","modified_gmt":"2026-05-28T09:32:00","slug":"bol-the-coexistence-paradox","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/index.php\/bol-the-coexistence-paradox\/","title":{"rendered":"BoL &#8211; The Coexistence Paradox"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center\"><a href=\"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/index.php\/bol-may-26\/\">Blood of the Leopard<\/a> &#8211; The Coexistence Paradox<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-large\"><img decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"1024\" height=\"410\" src=\"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/BoL_Coexistence_Header_v1-1024x410.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-2186\" srcset=\"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/BoL_Coexistence_Header_v1-1024x410.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/BoL_Coexistence_Header_v1-300x120.jpg 300w, https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/BoL_Coexistence_Header_v1-768x307.jpg 768w, https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/BoL_Coexistence_Header_v1-1536x614.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/BoL_Coexistence_Header_v1.jpg 1600w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p>The leopard is the only big cat that has genuinely learned to live alongside human beings. It inhabits sugarcane fields and tea gardens, the edges of megacities and mountain villages, agricultural land and temple forests. No other large predator has demonstrated this degree of ecological flexibility. It is, in every measurable sense, a species adapted for coexistence.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That adaptability is now killing it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The closer the leopard lives to people, the more frequently it kills livestock. The more frequently it kills livestock, the stronger the economic and emotional pressure on communities to retaliate. The more communities retaliate, the more leopards die \u2014 poisoned, snared, beaten, and shot in incidents that are rarely prosecuted, frequently unreported, and systematically undercounted. And critically: the leopard killed in retaliation does not disappear. It enters the same parts market as the leopard killed by a professional poaching network. The conflict and the trafficking trade are not separate problems. They are the same problem, wearing different faces.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Numbers<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In Pauri Garhwal, Uttarakhand, 159 attacks on humans were recorded between 2006 and 2016. 121 leopards were killed in the same period \u2014 in retaliation by local communities or declared as man-eaters. Attack and counter-kill, running at near-equal rates across a decade. <a href=\"https:\/\/conbio.org\/mini-sites\/cac-nepal-2026\/visitor-info\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Society for Conservation Biology<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In Baitadi district, mid-hills Nepal, leopards killed 23 people and injured eight between 2011 and 2019. In retaliation, communities killed 26 leopards in the same period. More leopards killed than people \u2014 in a district with no commercial poaching network, no trafficking infrastructure, just communities responding to deaths in the only way available to them. <a href=\"https:\/\/communities.conbio.org\/events\/event-description?CalendarEventKey=c42a28f8-c95f-4db3-9469-019bbdd07fe5&amp;CommunityKey=5f7a30ab-ad6b-43a1-8df0-93c88ee30a1f&amp;Home=\/home\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Conbio<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In Maharashtra, 113 people died from leopard attacks between 2017 and 2022. The situation worsened dramatically: 14 deaths were recorded in just two months in 2025. In the same state, 675 leopard deaths were reported between 2021 and 2026. The political response was to attempt mass translocation \u2014 more than 150 leopards captured across three districts in Maharashtra in a two-month period in 2025 \u2014 a strategy with a documented history of failure. After a 2001 translocation programme in Junnar, the average annual attack rate rose from 4 to 17. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/ForrestGalante\/videos\/6-deadliest-man-eaters-to-ever-exist\/713176891625286\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Facebook + 2<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Paradox Made Visible \u2014 Junnar, Maharashtra<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Junnar was once cited as a model of human-leopard coexistence. It is now India&#8217;s most chronic conflict zone. In 2024 alone, eight human fatalities were recorded in ten months. On October 12, 2025, a six-year-old girl was killed in Shirur taluka, Pune district \u2014 the third child death in the district that year. In Pimparkhed village, back-to-back fatal attacks within twenty days triggered protests that included the burning of a Maharashtra Forest Department patrol vehicle and a blockade of the Pune-Nashik Highway. <a href=\"https:\/\/glibs.in\/9-accused-including-a-deputy-ranger-arrested-for-involvement-in-tiger-and-leopard-poaching\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Glibs + 2<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The state government&#8217;s response \u2014 announce a plan to transfer 50 leopards to a private facility run under the Ambani family umbrella \u2014 generated national controversy and was challenged in court. Maharashtra&#8217;s Forest Minister subsequently announced plans to reclassify the leopard from Schedule I to Schedule II of the Wildlife Protection Act \u2014 which would remove the highest level of legal protection from a species already under severe trafficking pressure. The political logic is understandable. The conservation consequence would be catastrophic. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/ForrestGalante\/videos\/6-deadliest-man-eaters-to-ever-exist\/713176891625286\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Facebook<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Junnar is not exceptional. It is predictive. What happens when community tolerance for leopards collapses under the weight of repeated deaths, inadequate compensation, and political pressure is visible there in real time. It is a warning about what follows when the coexistence infrastructure \u2014 compensation systems, rapid response teams, prey base management, community engagement \u2014 is allowed to fail.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Structural Drivers<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The conflict is not random. It follows a logic that field research has now documented clearly across multiple landscapes.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As tiger populations recover in India&#8217;s protected forest cores, leopards are displaced into fringe zones, farms, and villages where survival is harder. Easy prey \u2014 livestock and waste \u2014 turns settlements into ecological traps, increasing attacks on people and animals. The tiger recovery story, rightly celebrated as a conservation success, has a shadow: it pushes leopards into exactly the landscape where conflict is structurally inevitable. <a href=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Leopard_of_Rudraprayag\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Wikipedia<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the Annapurna Conservation Area, Nepal \u2014 where Mission Leopard currently operates \u2014 274 cases of leopard attacks on livestock were recorded between 2017 and 2020. Goats were the most frequently predated livestock, followed by sheep, cow\/ox, and buffalo. Areas near human settlements and protected area boundaries faced the highest risk. The geography of conflict maps precisely onto the geography of Mission Leopard&#8217;s LeopardEye deployments \u2014 the agricultural-forest interface where the snare, the retaliation kill, and the trafficking network all converge. <a href=\"https:\/\/news.mongabay.com\/2026\/05\/facebook-is-a-hub-for-illegal-wildlife-trade-and-thats-by-design-report-says\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">mongabay<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In North Bengal, leopard attacks on humans have shifted from a seasonal pattern to year-round occurrence. One wildlife professional told researchers: &#8220;I try to find areas with no leopards, but it is hard to find such places at present. The animals have spread out to even India&#8217;s border areas with Bangladesh, Nepal and Bihar.&#8221; The leopard&#8217;s range is not contracting. Its conflict footprint is expanding. <a href=\"https:\/\/conbio.org\/mini-sites\/cac-nepal-2026\/about\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Society for Conservation Biology<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Trafficking Connection<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The link between conflict and trafficking is documented, direct, and consistently underestimated in policy responses to both.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The Kandhamal case documented in May 2026 illustrates the mechanism precisely: a farmer poisons a leopard that killed his cow. He holds the skin for nearly a year, then attempts to sell it. The retaliation kill \u2014 driven by economic loss and grief \u2014 becomes a trafficking event. The farmer is not a poacher. He is a person who lost livestock he cannot afford to lose, made a decision in anger and desperation, and found that the skin had value. The market did the rest.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This pattern \u2014 retaliatory kill entering the parts trade \u2014 accounts for a significant and systematically undercounted proportion of leopard supply to trafficking networks. It is not captured in seizure statistics as &#8220;trafficking.&#8221; It appears as &#8220;conflict incident&#8221; in forest department records, if it appears at all. The true overlap between conflict mortality and trade supply is unknown, and the data infrastructure to measure it does not currently exist.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What is known is this: the leopard killed in a snare set for a barking deer, the leopard poisoned after a livestock kill, the leopard beaten to death by a mob after entering a village \u2014 these animals do not simply die. Their parts have value. And in a landscape where communities bear the costs of living with leopards but receive minimal economic benefit from their conservation, the decision to sell those parts is rational.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Coexistence Infrastructure \u2014 What Works, What Doesn&#8217;t<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The evidence base on conflict mitigation is now substantial enough to state clearly what reduces conflict and what doesn&#8217;t.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Mass translocation does not work. The Junnar data is unambiguous: after translocation, attack rates increased fourfold. Three of the microchipped leopards released in distant protected areas were subsequently recaptured at their new sites after causing casualties in areas with no prior history of human-leopard conflict. Translocation moves the problem, compounds it, and in some cases creates new conflict in previously unaffected communities. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/ForrestGalante\/videos\/6-deadliest-man-eaters-to-ever-exist\/713176891625286\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Facebook<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Predator-proof enclosures, livestock insurance schemes, rapid response systems, and prey base recovery demonstrably reduce conflict where consistently implemented. The challenge is consistent implementation \u2014 which requires sustained funding, staffing, and community trust that is difficult to build and easy to destroy with a single fatal attack.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>LeopardEye&#8217;s early warning system \u2014 currently deployed in the Annapurna region \u2014 addresses the detection gap: the absence of reliable, real-time intelligence about leopard proximity to settlements and livestock enclosures. A community that knows a leopard is near can take protective action. A community that finds out after a child is killed responds with grief, fear, and frequently, a machete.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The Political Moment<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Human-leopard conflict has evolved beyond being an ecological or social issue. It now carries significant political implications. The Maharashtra government&#8217;s consideration of downgrading the leopard&#8217;s legal protection status is the clearest signal yet that, without a credible and visible coexistence infrastructure, the political economy will eventually turn against the species. When a chief minister&#8217;s constituency is burning forest department vehicles and demanding leopard removal, the conservation argument is losing. <a href=\"https:\/\/glibs.in\/9-accused-including-a-deputy-ranger-arrested-for-involvement-in-tiger-and-leopard-poaching\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Glibs<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This is the paradox at its sharpest. The leopard&#8217;s adaptability \u2014 the quality that makes it ecologically extraordinary \u2014 generates the conflict that threatens its legal protection, which enables the trafficking that depletes its numbers, which removes the very animals that communities need to learn to live alongside. Each element of the crisis feeds the next.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Addressing the coexistence paradox is not separate from addressing leopard trafficking. It is the same intervention, at a different point in the same cycle.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Blood of the Leopard &#8211; The Coexistence Paradox The leopard is the only big cat that has genuinely learned to live alongside human beings. It inhabits sugarcane fields and tea gardens, the edges of megacities and mountain villages, agricultural land and temple forests. No other large predator has demonstrated this degree of ecological flexibility. It [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2185"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2185"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2185\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2190,"href":"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2185\/revisions\/2190"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/wildleopard.net\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2185"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}