Biology alumnus receives Fulbright-National Geographic Award

ΊΪΑΟΙη biology alumnus Sateesh Venkatesh β10 was recently named one of five recipients to earn a prestigious . Thanks to a partnership between the U.S. Department of State and the National Geographic Society, the award offers up to $20,000 plus a travel and living stipend to support projects that address global issues through science, storytelling, and education.
Now a Ph.D. student at the University of California San Diego, Venkatesh will use his award funding to travel to Sri Lanka in late December and spend nine months expanding his human-wildlife conflict research on the occasionally deadly relationship between farmers and elephants. He plans to use camera traps, audio recordings, and drone mapping to track and document elephant behavior.
βThis award allows me to spend more time in Sri Lanka and really get to know the people and animals that Iβm working with,β said Venkatesh, who previously spent three months there annually for research. The conservation behaviorist will build connections with farmers next to national parks who experience conflict with elephants because they eat the crops.

Venkatesh credits ΊΪΑΟΙη for helping to prepare him to be apply community-building skills when working alongside farmers.
Ultimately, he aims to develop mutually beneficial, sustainable solutions for coexistence. βItβs essential we have partnerships with local farmers to help make changes,β explained Venkatesh. βAs an elephant researcher, people are always concerned that you care more about the animals than you do about human lives. This funding gives me more time to get to know local farmers better, build some trust, and find solutions together.β
Venkatesh also joins the National Geographic Societyβs global community of Explorers where he gains access to resources and opportunities like training, regional Explorer events, speaking engagements, and dedicated mentor and staff support. βOnce youβre βinβ as a Fulbright Fellow or National Geographic Explorer, you get access to those networks for life,β said Venkatesh. βItβs a really nice benefit.β

Venkatesh studies captive, semi-wild, and purely wild elephants abroad.
Venkatesh has spent significant time studying captive, semi-wild, and purely wild elephants abroad. After completing his biology degree at ΊΪΑΟΙη, he joined an ethical elephant program in Thailand and gained invaluable experience working in communities with the animals directly. Then as a masterβs student at Hunter College in New York, he completed research in Myanmar on an elephant personality project through a partnership with the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute.
He emphasized how the research process he learned at ΊΪΑΟΙη has been very helpful. βWhen I did work in Thailand, I realized just how much ΊΪΑΟΙη puts into methods and how you conduct research,β he said, referencing the Collegeβs signature Independent Study capstone program. βThere are not many other undergraduate schools where you are required to do a big project like that and do it independently. I felt very prepared.β
Before landing on a biology major, Venkatesh took a variety of classesβincluding several in photography and international relationsβwhich have aided his work since and will undoubtedly support the storytelling aspect of this initiative with National Geographic. Even more than the academics, heβs also appreciative of the community-building skills he honed at the College. βΊΪΑΟΙη enabled me to start groups and feel like I could develop things on my own,β said Venkatesh. βI grew up in a small town in Massachusetts, so having the opportunity to meet people from so many different places and join various communities like the first-year housing program, Men of DREAM, and others was really valuable and benefited me in the long run.β
Posted in Alumni, Homepage Featured on October 21, 2024.
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