Gautam Shah: Saving wildlife from behind the computer screen

National Geographic Explorer Gautam Shah hopes to catalyze new ways to engage people with wildlife through groundbreaking technology.

March 25, 2021
3 min read
How Digital Science Can Tell Animals’ StoriesWildlife storyteller Gautam Shah develops groundbreaking digital tools to engage people with wildlife through unique mobile games, augmented reality, and data visualization at Explorers Festival London 2019.

Gautam Shah is the founder of Internet of Elephants, a social enterprise that develops groundbreaking digital tools to engage people with wildlife. 

For most his life, living in the United States, India, Argentina and Kenya, he’s had incredible experiences with wildlife around the world

 

but no positive impact on that wildlife. 

Gautam Shah, National Geographic Explorer
Photograph by Rebecca Hale

In 2014, Shah decided to change that and quit his job of 20 years as an IT consultant at Accenture to pursue new ways that technology could be used towards wildlife conservation.

Through unique mobile games, augmented reality and data visualizations that use GPS and other data gathered about individual animals, Internet of Elephants tells the stories of individual animals studied by conservation organizations and individuals all over the world. In doing so, Shah hopes to catalyze whole new approaches to engaging the public with wildlife.

Unseen Empire, by the Internet of ElephantsIn the new game 'Unseen Empire,' play the story of the largest camera trap study in history. Now available for download in the App Store and Google Play. (Photo of a clouded leopard, captured by Dr. Susan Cheyne.)

He is still ruining his back and his eyesight behind a desk and a laptop, but at least he is using his background and experience toward what is most important. 

Shah lives in Nairobi with his wife and newborn daughter.

Gautam Shah, National Geographic Explorer
National Geographic Explorer Gautam Shah speaks at the 2019 Explorers Festival, at the National Geographic Society headquarters in Washington, D.C.
Photograph by Sam Kittner