2021. Spatial Dynamics and Ecology of Large Ungulate Populations in Tropical Forests of India (Co-authored with N Samba Kumar, James D Nichols, Srinivas Vaidyanathan, Beth Gardner and Jagdish Krishnaswamy), Springer-Nature, Singapore.Link
2017. Methods for Monitoring Tiger and Prey Populations, (Co-edited with James D Nichols) Springer-Nature, Singapore.Link
2017. Science and Conservation of Animal Populations. Natraj Publishers, New Delhi, IndiaLink
2016. Recovering Biodiversity in Indian Forests (Co-authored with G Vishwanatha Reddy, N Samba Kumar, Jagdish Krishnaswamy and Krithi K Karanth), Springer Nature, Singapore.Link
2011. Camera traps in Animal Ecology (Co-edited with Allan F. O’Connel and James D Nichols), Springer Nature, Tokyo, JapanLink
2010. Science of Saving Tigers, Orient Blackswan, Hyderabad, India.Link
2002. Monitoring Tigers and their Prey (Co-edited with James Nichols), Centre for Wildlife Studies, Bangalore.
Duangchantrasiri, S., Sornsa, M., Jathanna, D., Jornburom, P., Pattanavibool, A., Simcharoen, S., Kanishthajata, P., Suebsen, P., Klanprasert, S., Kumar, N. S., Pandey, C. K., & Karanth, K.U. (2024). Rigorous assessment of a unique tiger recovery in Southeast Asia based on photographic capture-recapture modeling of population dynamics. Global Ecology and Conservation, 53, e03016. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gecco.2024.e03016Link
Athreya, V., Isvaran, K., Odden, M., Linnell, J. D., Kshettry, A., Krishnaswamy, J., Karanth, K.U.(2020). The impact of leopards (Panthera pardus) on livestock losses and human injuries in a human-use landscape in Maharashtra, India. PeerJ.Link
Karanth K.U., Kumar N.S., Karanth, K.K. (2020). Tigers Against the Odds: Applying Macro-Ecology to Species Recovery in India. Biological Conservation:Link
Nayak, R., Karanth, K. K., Dutta, T., De Fries, R., Karanth, K.U., Vaidyanathan, S. (2020). Bits and pieces: Forest Fragmentation by Linear Intrusions in India. Land Use Policy.Link
Kumar, A.V., Karanth, K.U., Jathanna, D. (2020) Tigers and leopards coexist despite similarities in space use and habitat selection. Cat News (Spring).Link
Jathanna, D., Kumar, S., N., Karanth, K.U. (2020) Summary and highlights of small carnivore photo-captures during a field season in the central Western Ghats, India. Small Carnivore Conservation, vol. 58, e58017. ISSN 1019-5041.Link
Jayadevan, A., Nayak, R., Karanth, K. K., Krishnaswamy, J., DeFries, R., Karanth, K.U., Vaidyanathan, S. (2020). Navigating paved paradise: Evaluating landscape permeability to movement for large mammals in two conservation priority landscapes in India. Biological Conservation, 247,108613.Link
Gopalaswamy M. A., Karanth, K.U., Delampady M., Stenseth C. N. 2019. How sampling- based overdispersion reveals India’s tiger monitoring orthodoxy. Conservation Science and Practice.Link
Dey, S., Delampady, M., Karanth, K.U. and Gopalaswamy, A.M. (2019). A spatially explicit capture-recapture model for partially identified individuals when trap detection rate is less than one. Calcutta Statistical Association (Bulletin), Vol. 71 (1):1-20.Link
Gardner, B., Sollman, R., Kumar, N.S., Jathanna, D., Karanth, K.U. (2018) State space and movement specification in open population spatial capture–recapture models. Ecology and Evolution.Link
2022. Among Tigers: Fighting to Bring Back Asia's Big Cats. Chicago Review PressLink
2021. Growing up Karanth (co-authored with Malavika Kapur and Kshama Rao). West Land Publications, IndiaLink
2006. Tiger Tales, (Edited Anthology), Penguin Press, India.Link
2006. A View from the Machan, Permanent Black, India.Link
2001. The Way of the Tiger, Voyageur Press, USA and Colin Baxter, UK & Universities Press India.Link
2007. Hulirayana Akashavaani (A Tiger’s Broadcast, with TS Gopal)Link
2005. Huliya Baduku (Life of the Tiger)
2000. Kaadu Pranigala Jadinalli (Tracking Wild Animals)
1983. Aranya Matthu Samaja (Forests and Society)
The Trouble with Tiger NumbersLink
How the tiger can regain its stripes, The Hindu, 13-08-2020Link
A flawed visionDemystifying India’s tiger counts, The telegraph, 10-08-2020,Link
Reflections on International Tiger Day, July-29-2020,Link
Crounching tiger, hidden data, The Hindu, 20-08-2019,Link
“It's Global Tiger Day—How Is the Effort to Save Them Going?”, Scientific American, 29-07-2018Link
Increased poaching under lockdown, not the virus, is the new threat to tigers,Link