Sunday, June 5, 2011

Not out of the woods, yet

Landscpae species such as the elephant needs vast spaces. Pic:Sanjay Gubbi

Another year has passed since the last World Environment Day. The media and public had a burst of information about climate change and are perplexed by it as this hazard would directly affect Homo sapiens. On a global scale the society wakes up to such daunting environmental issues as it happened in the past with nuclear energy, greenhouse gases and others. Nonetheless there are equally serious concerns with saving species that co-inhabit this planet and has failed to generate similar levels of attention or commitment from the society.

Species conservation

The nation faces an uphill task in saving its national animal, the tiger. Loss of habitat and prey continue to threaten the tiger. However one question that draws the attention and curiosity of most people from laymen to policy makers, how many tigers do we have? Countrywide estimates of tiger densities that were recently put out by the Government drew flak from certain sections of the wildlife community. Nevertheless India is still the best prospect for saving this amber-eyed cat beyond our generations is a matter of solace.

Taking cue from the committee set up to devise policies to save tigers, the Government instituted the Elephant Task Force for drawing up plans to ensure the long-term future of this species. However due to lack of public and media pressure the recommendations of the task force did not go beyond the symbolic declaration of elephant as the national heritage animal. Wish the recommendations were taken seriously about the species which is largely responsible for creating tension amongst its human neighbours due to its ability to damage crops and inflict human fatalities.

The other species that draws attention due its biological and elastic nature of living close to humans and also responsible for high levels of conflict is the spotted cat; the leopard. The species continues to be hacked, stoned and burnt with little pragmatic approaches to reduce the problem. Very importantly the behaviour of people in situations when large-bodied wildlife enters human habitations is appalling. Large-scale public education and crowd management by the police are very essential.

Recent information reveals that tigers move vast distances in search of new territories. This brings into limelight the issue of creating corridors and holding on to viable forest cover between protected areas. In this direction the concept of critical wildlife habitats needs a relook. We need to identify and declare areas that are ecologically vital and provide linkages between source wildlife populations especially for wide-ranging species such as the tiger.

The future of large mammal conservation depends upon political will and integrated conservation planning. Pic:Sanjay Gubbi

The decision maker

After decades the country has a Minister for Environment and Forests who has made his presence felt. There is little doubt that a few issues could have been dealt in a more realistic manner. At present the ministry is more transparent and trying to move away from the tight totalitarian regime. Opportunities are provided to civil societies, eminent scientists to participate in the decision making processes which were almost non-existent during the previous administrations. The minister faced wrath of the business community for going by the rule book. A leading journal from the Wall Street touted him as someone with an ‘activist agenda’ and sacrificing economic growth for environmentalism.

Despite all the criticism I would say the minister got some respect to Paryavaran Bhavan which earlier acted only as a project clearing machinery. It is true that rearranging a system built over half a century is not as easy as rearranging nuts and bolts of machinery. There surely have been a few steps in the right direction that needs to be appreciated.

Infrastructure development should be kept out of critical wildlife habitats. Pic:Basavanna.H.S

Finally

Currently the world is filling up; filling up with more people. India announced its population to be about 1.21 billion, with it has also grown the economy. The mantra of perpetual development is now the secular religion. Development projects uninterruptedly continue to assault natural habitats. Today there is little doubt to believe that our world is crafted and guided by a few corporate houses and individuals. Development lobbyists from across the globe are the political actors deciding the way our wildlife habitats are sliced, cut, divided and distributed among several interest groups that want a piece of our wildlife turf.

It is not development versus wildlife conservation. A middle path where wildlife is kept at the core of development planning when it involves ecologically sensitive areas is the need of the hour. If highways, dams and mines do not slice the country’s four percent land area that harbours our national parks and wildlife sanctuaries, it makes little or no dent in the overall growth objectives of the country. In this world of limitless demands and with limited land area for wildlife, urgent steps are to be taken if we are serious about securing the homes of tigers, elephants, rhinos and other habitat-specialist species.

An edited version of this article has been published in The Hindu on 05-06-2011

http://www.hindu.com/mag/2011/06/05/stories/2011060550040100.htm

2 comments:

  1. I met you 14 years ago in Vancouver when I was 15 and was thrilled with your talk then. I spent one week after with a friend hunting down sellers of endangered animal parts in my city. Again I hear your plea here to develop land such that us humans do not fragment the vital corridors used by the other sentient beings of earth. Thanks for sharing your thoughts Sangay-ji. Kindest regards, Giles

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  2. Wish the political will was not a matter of good luck. And the implementations of outcomes of conservational research/studies should not be so slow that more species get endangered in the meanwhile! Nice write up..:)

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