"The Vanishing: India's Wildlife Crisis" penned by environmentalist Prerna Singh Bindra shows how projects like the Ken-Betwa river link, the expansion of NH 7, and the prospects of Uranium mining among others are advocating development at the expense of the environment.
"India has perhaps the finest conservation laws, but they are poorly implemented, bypassed, ignored, and circumvented.
"The other problem is that the laws and conservation policies are being diluted, largely to accommodate the ease of doing business, to facilitate faster approvals for industries and infrastructure," Bindra told PTI.
"Reckless development is fragmenting even this minuscule part of India, which is the refuge of India's spectacular and rare wildlife, with railway lines, highways, canals, wires criss-crossing the reserves; plus there are villages, temples, townships, reservoirs, mines within these areas, and in their immediate vicinity," the author said.
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Regarded as a global leader in conservation, India is refuge to species that are almost extinct elsewhere.
Bindra notes that despite the country's conservation efforts, a lack of commitment points to a grim future with several species becoming extinct.
"But India is lacking the will, and the commitment, to conserve, and if the current rate continues, wildlife faces a grim future," she said.
While species like Indian bustard, hangul and gharial remain critically endangered, wolves and lesser floricans are becoming locally extinct in former habitats with a drastic decline in their number.
The former journalist who grew up exploring wetlands and woods in her neighbourhood, decided to be a part of the system after being disturbed by the "silence that surrounded this destruction of forests and a deteriorating environment".
"A part of the Narayan Sarovar Sanctuary (Gujarat), where I saw my first wolves, was cut up to accommodate a cement plant," she said.
While government's initiatives can help the environment, Bindra feels the onus also lies with each individual who can lend support to those who are engaged in conserving environment by using their skills to influence others around them.
"Nature needs a greater constituency - unless the electorate speaks up, the governments won't give wildlife priority," she said.