Dipika and Ghosal went down 8-11, 8-11 to Joelle and Paul 8-11, 8-11 in the final to miss the gold medal.
Notwithstanding the loss, this championship has been historic for India with three medals won for the first time in the history of the Championship.
Besides Dipika and Saurav winning the silver, the other mixed pair of Joshna Chinappa and Harinder Pal Sandhu as also the doubles pair of Joshna and Dipika won a bronze medal each for being the losing semi-finalists.
"Which ever way one viewed it, this has been a fabulous show overall by the Indians. Returning with three medals is something to be proud of and the players surely need a pat on their backs for this," said national coach Cyrus Poncha, who had accompanied the Indian squad.
More From This Section
It was an unexpected end for Dipika and Saurav as the duo had beaten the New Zealand pair in the league just a day earlier. The Indian pair played well but failed to create the same magic.
While the Indians were under pressure, they still matched point for point. Where they missed out was in not able to come up with right variations.
Rallies were few but Paul in particular and Joelle showed the touch to get the drops going well and also hitting the ball through the middle to leave the Indians stranded at times. Indians lacked that finesse though an occasional Dipika floater did raise optimism.