Aishwarya Sridhar grew up in New Panvel, on the edge of the biodiverse foothills of Matheran, an ecosystem that holds nearly 7–8% of the world’s recorded species. A graduate in Mass Media, with Cambridge A Levels in Business and Accounting, she was raised in a family that balanced structure and creativity. Her father, Sridhar Ranganathan, a Chartered Accountant and former Vice President at Vodafone, taught her financial discipline while her mother, Rani Sridhar, an advertising professional and homemaker, nurtured storytelling instincts. Her earliest memories are of forests, fireflies, and quiet ecological change. “As I grew older, I watched that world slowly change, forests gave way to highways, and the fireflies disappeared.” That loss ignited a purpose in her. A turning point came when she watched Life with Sir David Attenborough. If a documentary could make her care about Komodo dragons from her living room, she reasoned, perhaps she could do the same for India’s wildlife. Conservation through Storytelling Today, Aishwarya is a National Geographic Explorer, Canon EOS Influencer, and Associate Fellow at the International League of Conservation Photographers (iLCP). As the co-founder and CEO of Bambee Studios, she leads a full-service production house specialising in natural history and environmental documentaries for global broadcast. “I don’t see my work as content creation, I see it as conservation through storytelling,” she says. “My camera is simply the bridge between two worlds, the wilderness and people who may never step into it.” Her productions have aired on National Geographic WILD, Arte, CuriosityStream, NHK, KBS, and Love Nature. Her photography has appeared in National Geographic magazine, BBC Wildlife, The Guardian, Mongabay, Digital Camera, The Times of India, and Sanctuary Asia. In 2020, she became the first Indian woman to win at the Wildlife Photographer of the Year Awards in London, and she has received