Friday, 22 February 2013

Leopard found shot dead on Malankara coffee estate

Leopard found shot dead

The carcass of a leopard was found in a private coffee estate at Malankara near Sulthan Bathery in the district on Thursday morning.

The estate workers found the carcass of the male leopard, aged about six years, and informed the forest officials. The animal appeared to have been shot dead.

Forest cover depletes in Krishna district

G.V.R. SUBBA RAO

115.8 hectare of forest land has been cleared and encroached upon in the last two years

  • The initiative to raise plantations in forest land also accounts for negative growth
  • Attempts to encroach upon forest land traced in Sunkollu and Kantreipadu of Nuzvid range
Not for long:A view of the fast depleting Kondapalli
forest near Vijayawada.— Photo: Ch. Vijaya Bhaskar
The forest cover in Krishna district is depleting and a negative growth is being recorded, if the satellite images are to be believed. The negative growth has been recorded in two consecutive years of 2010 and 2011.

As much as 115.8 hectares of forest land has been cleared and encroached upon. The initiative to raise plantations in forest land has also accounted for negative growth in the district.

Satellite images point out that there is a decrease of 41.96 Ha of open forest and 4.30 Ha of scrub between 2009 (October-December) and 2010 (October-December).

The State government, in the forest report 2012, noted that a negative change (including scrub) of 27.66 Ha is on account of clearance of jungle growth for raising plantations. Encroachments accounted for 18.6 Ha.

The negative growth was recorded in previous year as well. Comparison of forest cover (satellite data of October 2009) with that assessment year (satellite imagery of October 2008-February 2009), shows a negative change of 150.28 Ha.

There is a decrease of 20 Ha of moderately dense forest, 126 Ha of open forest. Of the total negative change, raising plantations accounts for 53.08 Ha, and encroachments in 97.2 Ha.

A negative growth was recorded in Nuzvid range of Vijayawada division in the district, as 27.66 Ha was cleared for plantation. The Andhra Pradesh Forest Development Corporation is supposed to take up plantation there. Fresh attempts to encroach on forest land were traced in Sunkollu and Kantreipadu of Nuzvid range.

When contacted, Divisional Forest Officer P.J. Banerjee said that the vegetation growth depends on various factors including rainfall and sub-soil moisture.

The clearance of vegetation for raising plantations was a forest management intervention. So, it cannot be considered as loss of forest cover. There were few old encroachments, and fresh attempts were made. Cases were slapped against the encroachers, he said.

Source: http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-in-school/forest-cover-depletes-in-krishna-district/article4444521.ece

Forest guards attacked, check post vandalised

Case registered against timber merchants, lorry owners and drivers
The Forest Department check-post on
Salem – Yercaud Ghat Road that was vandalised
in Salem on Friday. PHOTO: P. GOUTHAM
Two forest guards were assaulted and the check post they were manning vandalised by a few timber merchants at the Salem — Yercaud Ghat Road, here on Friday morning.

 According to the police, around 6 a.m. on Friday, eight lorries carrying silver oak logs from Yercaud was stopped at the check post and the forest guards, Jayakumar (34) and Sri Ganesh (32), asked the drivers to produce the documents. The drivers, who did not have valid documents, left their vehicles behind to inform their owners.

Later, around 9.30 a.m., more than 30 persons, including lorry owners, drivers and timber merchants, reached the check post and entered into an altercation with the guards. They allegedly assaulted the guards and damaged the properties at the check post. Later they broke the check post’s gate and drove away the lorries.

The guards, who sustained injuries, were admitted to Government Mohan Kumaramangalam Medical College Hospital. Yercaud Tahsildar Chandrasekaran, Additional Superintendent of Police Saroj Kumar Tagore and senior forest officials inspected the spot.

 N. Thangaraju, District Forest Officer, Salem Division, told The Hindu that this was the second attack on the personnel at the check post and protection has been sought from the police.

Forest officials said that under the Tamil Nadu Hill Areas (Preservation of Trees) Act, 1955, the order for tree cutting has to be obtained from the District Committee, headed by the District Collector. “Only if trees are felled legally, it can be transported. Only the committee is empowered to take action against the violators”, the officials said.

 Based on a complaint lodged by forest guard Sri Ganesh, Yercaud police have registered a case against 20 persons, including lorry owners, drivers and timber merchants under Sections 147 (rioting), 148 (rioting with deadly weapon), 294 (b) (uttering obscene words in public place), 353 (assault or criminal force to deter public servant from discharging duty), 332 (voluntarily causing hurt to deter public servant from his duty) and 506 (i) (criminal intimidation) of the Indian Penal Code. Search is on for the accused.

Source: http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-miscellaneous/forest-guards-attacked-check-post-vandalised/article4445258.ece

India praised for its vulture conservation efforts

Saswati Mukherjee, TNN | Feb 21, 2013, 02.11 PM IST
The paper published in the journal "Science"
by Dr Andrew Balmford of Cambridge University
gives a perspective on the progress of
vulture conservation in South Asia.
BANGALORE: The vultures in South Asia have been under threat for over a decade now. But the silver lining is that India has acted quickly to conserve this species, as compared to many western countries in the past in the case of other environmental pollutants. A new research paper in 'Science' has observed that the central and state governments in India were quick enough to bring the vultures back from the brink, with help of research institutions such as BNHS, under the SAVE (Saving Asia's Vultures from Extinction) consortium. The paper further states that many western countries have been much slower in acting upon the environmental impacts of pesticides that were felt over decades.

Timely action

The paper published in the journal "Science" by Dr Andrew Balmford of Cambridge University gives a perspective on the progress of vulture conservation in South Asia. It attributes the progress so far to the quick response of the governments in the region to the vulture crises by banning veterinary diclofenac. The pesticide effect in the West continues to cause grave damage to non-target organisms. But in South Asia, the fact that vulture declines have significantly slowed and possibly even reversed has been directly attributed to the prompt action over the past decade.

Expressing satisfaction on the action taken by authorities in India so far, BNHS Director, Asad Rahmani said, "The timely ban on veterinary diclofenac in South Asia, along with the research and conservation efforts of BNHS and the SAVE partners, based on scientific facts has proved to be a successful step in the right direction". Commenting on the issue author Dr Balmford said, "The vulture collapse is an immense problem - in its sheer extent as well as in its significance for people. So news that the declines are beginning to slow and even reverse is extremely welcome and a testament both to the tremendous hard work of all the NGOs in the SAVE consortium and to the responsiveness of governments in the region."

The way ahead

However, it has to be noted that the job of saving the vultures is far from complete. Before the captive bred vultures can be safely released back into the wild across South Asia, it needs to be ensured that the countryside does not have diclofenac lingering in the food chain. Vulture Safe Zones (VSZs) need to be identified in various regions. The recent SAVE meeting held in Kathmandu in November 2012 stressed the need for preventing human diclofenac being used for veterinary purpose. This can be achieved by packaging human diclofenac in smaller vials not larger than 3ml, which would be much less convenient for using on cattle. Talking on the issue, Chris Bowden, Programme Manager, SAVE said, "Establishing a safety-testing system for alternative veterinary drugs is essential since some of them are probably as dangerous as diclofenac. Government action so far has been quite good and with the help of IVRI (Indian Veterinary Research Institute), we hope that these last essential steps can also be taken".

Populations of the three Asian vulture species, viz. Oriental White-backed Vulture, Long-billed Vulture and Slender-billed Vulture, declined by more than 99% in South Asia since the early 1990s. Veterinary diclofenachad lethal effects on vultures that fed on cattle carcasses, which had been treated with the drug shortly before death. Thegovernments in South Asia subsequently banned the veterinary use of the painkiller in 2006. Meanwhile, scientists from BNHS and RSPB (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, UK), along with forest departments in various states of India have been successfully working on vulture breeding, advocacy and field research such as carcass sampling. The SAVE consortium for efforts across borders was set up in 2011 and subsequently a new Regional Steering Committee has been set up by International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and the Indian Government. At present over 250 vultures are being nurtured in the three BNHS conservation breeding centres in India. In 2012, 26 new vultures were raised. In the wild, the latest trends suggest that the vulture decline has slowed since 2007 and White-backed Vulture numbers have even increased in some localised areas.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/environment/flora-fauna/India-praised-for-its-vulture-conservation-efforts/articleshow/18608037.cms