Anand Parthasarathy
TheHindu, September 12, 2006
TheHindu, September 12, 2006
An international conference in Munnar on the Nilgiri tahr and its cousins
They
are sometimes horned, always hooved and herbivorous. They graze the
slippery slopes of the world's hilly, and occasionally snow-covered,
grasslands. They form a global family of mammals known as ungulates that
is under increasing threat from war, encroachment or human greed.
For
three days from September 13, over 100 naturalists from a dozen nations
will meet at Munnar, Kerala, home to arguably the best conserved of the
Indian ungulates the Nilgiri tahr.
The
International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) is holding the
World Congress on Mountain Ungulates (WCMU), the fourth since 1989 and
the first in Asia, near the Eravikulam National Park. The park, with its
tropical grassland ecosystem, is today home to over 700 of the
2,000-odd tahr that are in the Anamalai region of the Western Ghats.
"Conservation
efforts are afoot in over 20 countries and they target such diverse
ungulates like the Tibetan gazelle and the yak in Ladakh; the Iberian
Ibex in Portugal; and its Nubian cousin in Yemen; the Alpine chamois in
Italy and Switzerland; the Rocky Mountain goat of Canada and the U.S.
and the Korean goral," explains Mohan Alembath, president of the Nilgiri
Tahr Trust.
He is a conservationist who served the
Kerala Forest Department until 2001. During a nine-year tenure as Wild
Life Warden, he helped make Eravikulam one of the rare success stories
in conservation this country has seen.
The event is
hosted by the Munnar-based High Range Wildlife and Environment
Preservation Association, largely staffed by nature-loving members of
the Tata Tea plantations that dominate the Kannan Devan Hills.
Partnership
The
partnership between the Association and the State Forest Department has
been a model of public-private cooperation in conservation.
The
delegates will be able to assess the results first-hand: the tahr's
calving season is just over and the fresh count is just in. Their visit
also coincides with the 12-yearly flowering of the neela kurinji, which
is turning the Munnar hills into a blue blaze of colour.
Discussions
The
discussions will include the need to create a Pamir Peace Park where
China, Pakistan and Afghanistan meet, to help conserve the Marco Polo
sheep now less than 6,000 in number.
It will discuss why the Swedish moose is under threat from its most formidable predator, the European brown bear.
It
will consider what the disturbed environment in Kashmir is doing to the
lifestyle and very existence of the Kashmir stag or hangul.
Hopefully,
the exchange of experience and results will help the world's hooved
grazers cling on a mite more firmly to their precarious and increasingly
threatened grazing lands.
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