2015 March 3 Wildlife day observation: study at Nelliampathy-parambikulam Route organised by Aashrayam Rural Development Society, Kollengod, Palakkad, and Nemmara Forest Division of Kerala Forest Department. Precious, Endangered, and most important species, endamic to Western Ghats are sighted in Nellimapathy- Parambikulam forest areas. a pair of Sloth bear was the first to come across in Minnampara forest, Gaur, Nilgiri thar, rare and endamic snakes, butterflies, scats of leopard, tiger, elephant, spotted... hundreds of birds and deers found. endamic plants also found here. the 24 member team studied the wildlife abundance of this biodiversity hotspot region of Western Ghats under the leadership of Mr. S.Guruvayurappan Mr. Ranjith, P.Aravandakshan, etc. The team demands the Kerala Forest Department to Protect this beautiful Nelliampathi landscape and biodiversity by Merging in to Parambikulam Tiger reserve. An Urgent Detailed Wildlife Census is also requested t...
IANS Jumbos under siege in southern India Thursday, 28 February , 2008, 09:04 New Delhi: Environmentalists and wildlife activists have pressed the panic button in the elephant corridor connecting Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu where the Asian tusker is under siege. According to an estimate by the NGO Wildlife Protection Society of India (WPSI), more than 20 elephants have died between January 2007 and January 2008 in southern India as a result of man-animal conflict. Development has eaten into the vast green swathes of the Bandipore wildlife sanctuary, the Nagarhole national park, the Madukkarai forest division, the largest reserve of Asiatic elephants, and the corridor between the Parambikulam wildlife sanctuary and Pooyamkutty genepool area, straddling the three States. The areas are loose parts of an almost contiguous elephant reserve in southern India. In January, four elephants of a herd were crushed to death by a speeding train at Kurumbanpalayam near Madukkarai in the Coimba...
Elephant task force final report published Click here for the Report News reports say: Panel for phased curbs on captive elephants Bombay News.NetTuesday 31st August, 2010 (IANS) The elephant task force set up by the environment and forests ministry has recommended discontinuing in a regulated manner the practice of keeping elephants in temples, zoos and circuses.In its report submitted to Environment and Forests Minister Jairam Ramesh Tuesday, the 12-member task force said there are 3,500 captive elephants in the country with 1,200-1,500 of them working in temples.'It is not possible to put a blanket ban on captive elephants but eventually they have to be phased out. There is a need for some kind of regulation in this respect,' said Mahesh Rangarajan, who heads the task force.Concerned over the 'poor status' of captive elephants in temples, Ramesh asked the members of the task force to talk to the temple managements.Initially the task force is likely to hold dialogu...
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