Dr. Milind Bunyan

Dr. Milind Bunyan's picture
Dr. Milind Bunyan
Fellow - 1 (Assistant Professor)
milind.bunyan@atree.org
Real name: 

Academic Qualifications

  • PhD (Forest Resources and Conservation), University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA 
  • M.Sc. Forestry (Economics & Management), Forest Research Institute, Dehradun, India
  • B.Sc. (Environmental Science, Chemistry, Botany), St. Joseph’s College of Arts and Sciences, Bangalore, India

Research Intrests

Milind Bunyan is a forest ecologist with research interests in invasive alien species, landscape ecology and restoration ecology. Milind uses RS-GIS to characterise ecosystems and communities and develop tools for restoring landscapes. His previous work ranges from building species distribution models for cryptic birds in the Mojave Desert to assessing vegetation productivity trends across the semi-arid regions of Africa and India. 

His current work explores top-down (e.g. RS data) and bottom-up (e.g. citizen science) approaches to prioritise sites for restoration or conservation action. This work spans diverse sites, including tropical montane grasslands in the Western Ghats and semi-arid savannas in peninsular India. Through his research, Milind promotes using open-source and open-access platforms and data, citizen science and applied research that addresses societal challenges.


Publications

Google Scholar Profile


Blog Posts

People Page

Journal Articles

Arasumani, M and Khan, Danish and Das, Arundhati and Lockwood, Ian and Stewart, Robert and Kiran, Ravi A and Muthukumar, M and Bunyan, Milind and Robin, VV 2018 Not seeing the grass for the trees: Timber plantations and agriculture shrink tropical montane grassland by two-thirds over four decades in the Palani Hills, a Western Ghats Sky Island. PLoS ONE, 13 (1). pp. 1-18. ISSN 1932-6203
M. Arasumani,Danish Khan,Arundhati Das,Ian Lockwood,Robert Stewart,Ravi A. Kiran,M. Muthukumar,Milind Bunyan ,V. V. Robin 2018 Not seeing the grass for the trees: Timber plantations and agriculture shrink tropical montane grassland by two-thirds over four decades in the Palani Hills, a Western Ghats Sky Island PLOS ONE 13(1): e0190003. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0190003