Women saving endangered species
Datshiane Navanayagam talks to two Whitley Fund for Nature 2025 winners from Brazil and Nepal about their efforts to save the plants and animals they love from extinction.
Whitley Fund for Nature 2025 winners from Brazil and Nepal tell Datshiane Navanayagam about their efforts to save the plants and animals they love from extinction.
Reshu Bashyal is working to stop illegal poaching of wild orchids and Maire’s Yew trees in Nepal. Both plants are prized for their medicinal properties. Reshu is the research lead at Kathmandu-based Greenhood Nepal and has interviewed hundreds of yew harvesters to understand their motivations and harvest techniques. She is now restoring 1,000 hectares of habitat for orchids and Maire’s Yews, creating a community forest to promote best practices and developing an app for law enforcers to identify 100 plants that are trafficked.
Dr Yara Barros has revived jaguars from the brink of extinction in Iguacu National Park in Brazil where numbers plunged to just 11 individuals. Her solutions include setting up a 24/7 rapid response unit where local people can report sightings or attacks by jaguars. Yara started her career working with the last Spix's Macaw in the wild before going to work in a zoo. A face-to-face encounter with a male jaguar called 'Croissant' convinced her to devote the rest of her career to protecting the apex predators.
Produced by Jane Thurlow
(Image: (L) Reshu Bashyal credit Whitley Fund for Nature. (R) Yara Barros credit Whitley Awards.)
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Featured
-
.
Broadcasts
- Mon 2 Jun 2025 03:32GMTBBC World Service
- Mon 2 Jun 2025 10:32GMTBBC World Service
- Mon 2 Jun 2025 17:32GMTBBC World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only
- Mon 2 Jun 2025 21:32GMTBBC World Service except East and Southern Africa, Europe and the Middle East & West and Central Africa
The best of The Conversation
Podcast
-
The Conversation
Two women from different parts of the world share the stories of their lives