8 Places Humans and Wild Animals Clash OCT 1, 2013 09:40 AM ET // BY TIM WALL PREVIOUS / NEXT Mumbai and Sanjay Gandi National Park Monkeys groom in Sanjay Gandhi National Park. RICHARD T. NOWITZ/CORBIS Expanding cities can swallow biodiversity hotspots and other important protected natural areas. The resulting conflicts can prove fatal for both humans and wildlife. Defining boundaries between human homes and wildlife habitats presents a serious challenge when conservation areas intertwine with cities, Charles Nilon, professor of urban wildlife management at the University of Missouri, told Discovery News. Nilon provided eight examples of places where parks and people cohabitate. Sanjay Gandi National Park and Mumbai Mumbai, India's most populous city, sprang up around Sanjay Gandhi National Park's 40 square miles (104 square kilometers). Many squatter settlements fringe the park. These communities of...