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Mahendra Shrestha, Ph.D. - Director Save The Tiger Fund

Mahendra Shrestha is the director of the Save The Tiger Fund (STF) at the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation.

Mahendra ShresthaBorn and raised in a small village of farmers in Nepal, Dr. Shrestha joined the Forest Service, and later the National Parks Service in Nepal.  While working for the Government of Nepal and various nongovernmental organizations, Dr. Shrestha has gained extensive experience on conservation issues ranging from the management of national parks to community-based conservation and policy making.

Training ground level staff for monitoring wildlife species, resolving human-wildlife conflict, conservation-awareness raising, and public participation in conservation to benefit both wildlife and local communities are a few of the conservation issues Dr. Shrestha has focused on in the past. His work in taking wildlife conservation beyond the boundaries of parks and reserves to achieve landscape-level conservation led Dr. Shrestha to complete his Ph.D. research entitled “Relative Abundance in a Fragmented Landscape: Implications for Tiger Conservation” at the University of Minnesota.  This research provided baseline information on landscape patterns, corridors and connectivity, prey abundance and tiger distribution for the Terai Arc Landscape Conservation Project, which STF is now supporting.  He also conducted field work in parts of tiger landscapes in India and Bangladesh.

Trained as a forester in India with a Columbo Plan scholarship, Dr. Shrestha went on to be a Fulbright scholar while earning his masters at the University of Wisconsin Dr. Shrestha now uses his experience in Nepal, India and other parts of the tiger’s range for the Save The Tiger Fund.  He strongly believes in partnership and consensus building to reach the common goal of tiger conservation.