• The book Second Nature Saving Tiger Landscapes in the Twenty-First Century (RainfedBooks, Rs. 499) centres around author Gubbi quoting biologist Eric Dinerstein, who says: “Conservation is 10 per cent science and 90 per cent negotiation”. The book makes a case for applied conservation- leaving the lab to engage with the public – the real stakeholders- and the government. One of the instances in the book traces in detail his struggles to get Rs. 3,500 per month as hardship allowance to frontline staff in the forest department who work in protected areas – it took well over six years and bounced off four Chief Ministers till it finally came into effect!
  • Gubbi is credited with the remarkable feat of linking 21 wildlife reserves in Karnataka to reduce the impact of habitat fragmentation. Today the interlinked landscape covers 9,500 square kilometres, nearly the size of the State of Tripura. In 2011 Karnataka expanded its protected areas by 23 per cent – the largest such expansion since the 1970s when national parks and wildlife sanctuaries were largely formed.
  • The book speaks of efforts made in Karnataka, rerouting highways that lie inside the core areas of tiger reserves, restricting traffic through national parks at night, ensuring better working conditions for forest staff, and how the State’s fragile protected areas came to be meticulously mapped and linked.