Two leopards, their involved coats, which seamlessly insert themselves into the dry, cracked earth and crouches on the edge of a shrinking water hole and stripped the remains of a once flowering pond on the last cloudy. Elsewhere, a tiger grows in stagnating water, her golden eyes were aimed at something invisible – perhaps the in -depth silence of a landscape that is struggling to support itself. Scenes like this have become too familiar with the doctors PV Subramaniam and Sarita Subramaniam. The mumbaibased dentists who have been preserved have spent more than two decades to cross the forests of India and testify to both their breathtaking beauty and the slow, devastating defeat. When climate change accelerates and natural water sources disappear, India's wildlife is involved in a desperate, often invisible struggle for survival.
The couple decided to do their play, the couple founded the Earth Brigade Foundation (EBF) eight years ago, a non -profit organization that devoted themselves to improving habitats, the guarantee of water and nutritional security for wildlife and humananal conflicts. “I still remember that in May 2017 we saw and waited a young Tiger in the Kanha Tiger Reserve in Madhya Pradesh with a dry puddle. This moment was the last advance in powers that had to be done,” says 58-year-old Dr. Dr. Sarita devoted himself completely EBF, says that the solution is as simple as it was effective: solar-powered water pumps that pull underground water-von boreholes up to the surface, oblige steady supply for wild animals even in the toughest months. “The forest company uses tanker to refill water holes, but the process is carbon-intensive and annoying. The noise alone disturbs the animals,” says the 56-year-old doctor. “Solar-powered systems, on the other hand, require minimal maintenance, work sustainably and leave a much smaller environment footprint,” she adds.