September 23, 2015
The Kerala Forest and Wildlife Department is to launch
the first-ever comprehensive and scientific survey of butterflies in the
Munnar landscape soon. The three-day survey will commence on Thursday,
according to G. Prasad, wildlife warden at Munnar.
Mr.
Prasad says the area is characterised by a wide variety of habitat,
starting from the low-lying dry scrub jungles of the Chinnar wildlife
sanctuary to the ascending peaks with shola forests in the four
adjoining shola national parks and the Eravikulam National Park with
vast spreads of grasslands.
There is also a wide
gradient of altitude, temperature, and vegetation, which all put a
lepidopteran enthusiast in great excitement.
The survey
As
many as 60 butterfly enthusiasts, including Kalesh Sadasivan of the
Travancore Natural History Society and B. Sreekumar and Toms Augastine
of the Kottayam Nature Society, will be participating in the butterfly
survey, says Mr. Prasad.
E. Kunhikrishnan, senior
wildlife biologist, will be the programme coordinator and Mr. Prasad
will lead the survey to be held at the Chinnar wildlife sanctuary as
well as the four national parks of Mathikettan shola, Pampadum shola,
Anamudy shola, and the Kurinjimala wildlife sanctuary. All the four
shola national parks and the Chinnar wildlife sanctuary will be
systematically surveyed by establishing 14 strategic base-camps covering
all the elevations and habitats. The data will be gathered using
structured checklists and data sheets and critically analysed with GPS
readings, says Mr. Prasad.
Butterfly calendar
For
the first time in the world, the Wildlife division at Munnar has made
attempts to prepare a butterfly calendar for the Chinnar wildlife
sanctuary this year, he says. So far, as many as 208 butterfly species,
including 58 new species, have been identified in the Chinnar wildlife
sanctuary alone, he says.
Nilgiri Clouded Yellow,
Nilgiri Fritillary, Palni Four-ring — all rare and endemic to the
Western Ghats, Davisons Bush Brown and Red Disk Bush Brown, which are
endemic to the Southern Ghats, are a few of the rare butterfly species
identified in Chinnar.
The survey results are expected to be published during the Wildlife Week celebrations to be held from October 2 to 8.
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