Our Approach
Four ecosystems we fight for. Six steps we never skip. One commitment that has no expiry date. This page explains how Wildlands Trust turns ecological urgency into permanent legal protection — one parcel of land at a time.
India's 1,022 protected areas cover approximately 5% of the country's land. The global biodiversity framework calls for 30% by 2030. The gap — 25 percentage points, tens of millions of hectares — cannot be filled by government land acquisition alone. It never could be.
The most ecologically significant land in India is often privately held: ancestral farmland in the Western Ghats buffer zone, grasslands in the Deccan plateau that have never been formally surveyed, river corridors in the Gangetic plain that are not notified as forests but function as critical wildlife passages.
Voluntary private land stewardship is not a supplement to the protected area network. In many landscapes, it is the only mechanism capable of bridging the gap between islands of formal protection and creating the connected, functional ecosystems that large mammals need to survive.
When we use the word permanent, we mean it legally, ecologically, and generationally. A stewardship covenant registered with Wildlands Trust runs with the land — it binds future owners, future governments, and future courts in the same way a property title does.
This is not a promise. It is a legal instrument. We invest significant resources in the drafting and registration of every covenant, because a conservation agreement that can be undone by a future court order, a change of government, or a sale of the property is not worth the paper it is written on.
We have seen what happens when conservation depends on goodwill rather than law. We have seen reserves de-notified, wildlife sanctuaries mined, and forest land diverted. Permanent legal protection — held by an independent trust — is the only response to that history that we believe in.
We do not restrict our work to forests. India's ecological crisis spans every biome — and conservation that ignores that is incomplete.
The Western Ghats, Eastern Himalayas, and Northeast India hold some of the world's richest forest ecosystems. We protect old-growth patches, buffer zones, and the critical corridors between formal reserves — the passages tigers, elephants, and leopards depend on to survive. A disconnected forest patch is an ecological island. We work to prevent that.
India's grasslands are its most neglected and most misunderstood ecosystem — officially classified as "wasteland" in government land records. They are not wasteland. They are home to the Great Indian Bustard, Indian Wolf, Blackbuck, and Bengal Florican. They are being converted to solar farms, plantation forests, and agriculture at a rate that makes forest loss look manageable.
India's wetlands provide habitat for migratory waterbirds, freshwater fish, crocodilians, and the Gangetic Dolphin. They regulate flood cycles and groundwater for hundreds of millions of people. Their loss is an ecological and humanitarian crisis simultaneously — yet most remain outside the formal protection system.
The land alongside India's rivers is among the most ecologically productive on Earth — and among the most vulnerable. We protect riparian corridors that serve as movement routes for wildlife, buffer zones for river water quality, and habitat for species — like the Gharial — that cannot survive without clean, undisturbed rivers to breed in.
The mid-elevation forests of the Himalayas and Western Ghats are among the most species-rich on Earth and the most vulnerable to climate change. As temperatures rise, species shift upslope — and the land above current treelines becomes critical habitat that does not yet exist in any protected area network. We are protecting it now.
Some of the most ecologically significant land in India is neither forest nor grassland — it is farmland that borders a tiger reserve, an abandoned plantation reverting to forest, or a family holding that sits between two protected areas. These parcels are invisible to formal conservation programmes. We are not overlooking them.
Every parcel of land that enters the Wildlands Trust network goes through the same rigorous process — regardless of its size, its location, or how long it takes. Conservation shortcuts are how protected land ends up unprotected. We do not take them.
Our conservation scientists continuously map and assess unprotected land with high ecological significance — using satellite data, biodiversity surveys, hydrological analysis, and wildlife corridor modelling. We identify the parcels that matter most before we make any approach to a landholder.
We approach landholders directly, transparently, and without pressure. We explain what we do, what a stewardship agreement would look like, and what it would mean for their land in practice. Many conversations take months or years. We are in no hurry to reach an outcome. We are only interested in reaching the right one.
Once a landholder expresses interest, we conduct a thorough baseline survey — flora, fauna, water systems, soil condition, and connectivity to adjacent wild areas. This assessment determines the conservation value of the parcel and forms the scientific foundation of any agreement we propose.
No two stewardship agreements are identical. We tailor each one to the ecology of the land, the circumstances of the landholder, and the conservation outcomes we are working toward. Some are full conservation covenants. Others are management partnership agreements. All are permanent. None are rushed.
Signing an agreement is not the end of our involvement — it is the beginning. Every parcel in the Wildlands Trust network is visited regularly, monitored scientifically, and actively managed where necessary. Invasive species are cleared. Water sources are restored. Corridors are maintained. We are here for the long term.
When a protected property changes hands — through inheritance, sale, or gift — we ensure the conservation covenant transfers with it. We work with landholders and their legal advisors to make this seamless. The land's conservation status never depends on any single individual's continued ownership or goodwill.
If you own land with ecological value — forest, wetland, grassland, or farmland adjoining natural areas — we can work with you to conserve it permanently. You retain full ownership. We bring the ecological expertise, the legal framework, and the long-term management.
No pressure. No transaction. No deadline. We are interested in the land's future, not a quick agreement. If the conversation takes three years, it takes three years.
We listen first. A quiet conversation about your land, its history, and what you'd like it to become. All discussions are entirely confidential — we do not disclose landholder identities or property locations without explicit consent.
Our conservation scientists conduct a thorough baseline survey — flora, fauna, water systems, and connectivity to adjacent wild areas. This is done at no cost to you and with no obligation on either side.
We work with you on a voluntary agreement suited to your goals — management partnership, conservation covenant, or long-term stewardship arrangement. You remain in control. The land remains yours.
"Working with Wildlands Trust gave my land a purpose beyond farming. The forest is recovering. The wildlife has returned. And I know it will continue long after I am gone."— Conservation Partner, Satara District, Maharashtra
"The wild places of India are not an inheritance from our ancestors. They are a loan from our children."— Wildlands Trust founding charter, 1993