Panda Frama - WWF
Transcription
Panda Frama - WWF
South Western Ghats landscape WWF-India, Ameen Ahmed Ameen Ahmed WWF-India Newsletter www.wwfindia.org PANDA www.wwfindia.org Vol - I / Issue - I Jan - Mar. 2009 Foreword On another event, we especially would like to thank each and every supporter of the environment for the role that they have played in ensuring the success of Earth Hour–a campaign that received unprecedented public support. The event did show that citizens of India can and will respond to contributing to a better environment, through a symbolic action which joined them to a global link of better good for the earth. Earth Hour also demonstrated that people, institutions, businesses and government are aware of their role in bringing about a change in conserving the resources of our planet. In the coming days, the mandate is clear: it is for us to convert thought into action, action that is translated not only at individual levels but at policy conception and execution stages too. It is hoped that nationally and globally the issue of saving our planet receives priority in the agenda of all developed and underdeveloped nations. It is hoped that the UNFCCC COP 15 at CopenhagenDecember, 2009, will bring nations together to set aside some of their differences and work towards a change which is beneficial for our living planet. Dear Friends, We continue with our landscapes of hope series with special focus on South Western Ghats and a special story on the Earth Hour Campaign. The South-Western Ghats landscape covers a large part of South India and is an acknowledged biodiversity hotspot. We hope after having read the Panda you would have had an understanding of the landscape and the challenges that WWF-India faces to ensure that the landscape continues to retain its purity . Some of you have send us very interesting responses showing your interest in the articles published. We request you to send us any article which you would like to be published regarding topics you feel strongly about. Looking forward to your feedback WWF-India As we write, the tragedy of the Sundarbans is unfolding: destruction, disease, forced migration and de-homing - occurring simultaneously. Relief measures can never be timely in such events as the Aila cyclone, yet the work and reach of the NGOs contributing to ameliorate human suffering and the provision of relief materials is laudable. WWF India has also reached out to the communities in the affected areas but the work of rehabilitation is an immense task - one that needs close coordination with the government agencies and the several organisations in the area. A lot of our work relating to community interventions and climate change adaptation will need to start again. Our teams are showing their spirit and resilience. From the Editor’s Desk Dear Friends, Shaila Sam Editor Editorial Board Design Input : Dr. Parikshit Gautam, Mita Nangia Goswami, Dr. Prakash Rao, Dr. Dipankar Ghose & Nikita Aggarwal : Nikita Aggarwal Published by : WWF-India 172 - B, Lodi Estate, New Delhi - 110003 Tel : +91 11 41504797 Website : www.wwfindia.org Designed by : Ashish Rohilla at Kalavaani Printed by : Press Tech Litho Pvt. Ltd. A WWF-India publication for members. Responsibility for views / opinions expressed lies with the author(s). WWF-India Ravi Singh Secretary General & CEO WWF-India South Western Ghats landscape Contents Cover Story Project Updates Earth Hour 2009 1. South-Western Ghats 3. Mitigating HumanElephant Conflict in Anayirangal 5. Reducing Use of 7. fuel wood in production of lemon grass oil Nilgiri Tahr- A Special Study. 9. WWF-India reintroduces gharials into river Ganges 10. Saving The Dolphins From Extinction 11. The Rare Red 12. Kids Climate Adaptation 19. Centre Inaugurated in Sundarbans State Activities and Events Poem 23. World Wetlands Day Celebrations 24. Young Climate Savers Website Launched 24. 20. - Orissa 13. Global Forestry and Trade Network (GFTN)- towards protecting our forest wealth Sustainable Fisheries for a Healthy Marine Ecosystem Events - Andhra Pradesh - Himachal Pradesh 15. Staff Award 22. Visit to Gorshing 17. Glacier of Western Arunachal Pradesh Second Wintering 18. Habitat of Black Necked Crane in India www.wwfindia.org International Reader's Zone Asia's Lions 25. News Across the Globe The Coal Dilemma 25. 26. COVER STORY News Across The Globe cover story New Species hotspot in remote Cambodian Mekong Cantor's Giant softshell turtle, thought to be extinct in Cambodia since 2003 has been rediscovered in a section of the Mekong River almost untouched by humans. The findings are the result of a series of surveys jointly conducted by WWF Cambodia, the Fisheries Administration (FiA) and Forestry Administration (FA) of the Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF) in 2006/7. international 1 Arctic nations take important first step towards saving polar bears ITC Grand Central, Mumbai Five nations committed by treaty to conserve polar bears have come up with a resolution linking the future of the species to urgent global action on climate change. The five Arctic nations signed a binding 1973 Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears that includes provisions to protect polar bears and their habitat. They have agreed to come up with a circumpolar action plan for the management of bears, and to formally designate the Polar Bear Specialist Group of the World Conservation Union (IUCN) as the scientific advisory body to the Agreement. These both were measures proposed by WWF. Ultimately, the polar bear nations must join with other countries at the UN climate conference in Copenhagen in December 2009 to sign an effective global deal on climate change that will save the polar bears' Arctic sea ice habitat, along with the entire ice ecosystem. Delegates of 14 countries attending the World Water Forum signed pledges of support to a growing call to bring into force a global water treaty that has languished in limbo for more than a decade as anxiety grows about the increased potential for conflict in a world increasingly short of water. Recognised 16 countries signed up to the UN International Convention on Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses (the UN Watercourses Convention) - Finland, Germany, Hungary, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Namibia, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Qatar, South Africa, Sweden, Syria and Uzbekistan. The delegates said they shared WWF's concern that the poor coordination in river basin regulation between nations “represents a major threat to international peace and to the world's energy and food security.” The pledge also noted that climate change would worsen the global water crisis. INTERNATIONAL Interest grows in neglected global water treaty © Pankaj Chandan Ashoka Hotel, New Delhi EARTH HOUR 26 Light switched off at Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus Mumbai. The Story of ASIA'S LIONS By Divyabhanusinh Chavda 25 Lions once roamed the Asian continent from Palestine to Palamau. Over the centuries they were progressively wiped out throughout their range, ultimately being confined to a relict population in the Gir forest and its surrounding areas in Saurashtra. For more than half a century now, this has been the home of the only lion population outside Africa. Today about 400 lions survive in this region, but the animal's precarious existence has virtually disappeared from our consciousness. How this state of affairs has come to pass, and what is the status of the surviving lions, is the theme of this book. The writer introduces the lion and its present habitat, and goes on to examine through written and visual records the interaction between this majestic animal and human beings in Asia, from the earliest available historical records to the present day. Through Sanskrit, Persian, and other contemporaneous sources the profound effect the lion has The Coal Dilemma Editor S.K.Chand READER'S ZONE had on human civilization and culture, and the story of the destruction of the species in Asia is traced. Also documented here are the censuses conducted in the last hundred years to monitor its population dynamics, and the history of the attempts to find a second home for the lion, which still continue. The book evaluates efforts made for the conservation of the species in the first half of the 20th century by British administrators and more remarkably by the last two nawabs of Junagadh. The status in independent India is recorded, with indications of what the future holds for the lion in the 21st century. The work is of a unique nature as very rarely has an account of any species from historical times been attempted, one exception being this author's internationally acclaimed research on the cheetah in India. While there are innumerable books on the lions of Africa, there have been only three books about the lions in India ever written in English, none of which is easily accessible. There is, in fact, no book on the species' history either for Africa or for Asia and this is a pioneering attempt. As the climate policy under National Action Plan continues to unveil, a new publication by TERI (The Energy and Resources Institute) and WWF brings out thought provoking analysis of the state of coal as an energy resource in India. Titled “The Coal Dilemma”, released during one of the side-events of the Delhi Sustainable Development Summit (DSDS) 2009, highlights the urgency to review the supply and availability of coal in context of exposition of overall energy security. Earth Hour began in Sydney in 2007, when 2.2 million homes and businesses switched off their lights for one hour. In 2008 the message had grown into a global sustainability movement, with 50 million people switching off their lights.It assumes greater importance now as 2009 is a critical year for action on climate change with world leaders due to meet at the UN Conference on Climate Change in Copenhagen come December, to sign a new deal superseding the Kyoto Protocol. This was Earth Hour-the world's global election, between Earth and global warming. By participating in Earth Hour and voting for Earth, a billion people across the world got together to form a worldwide constituency that is eager to demand quick and fair action to crack the problem of climate change. A host of high profile ambassadors across the world extended their support to the campaign, most notably Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Desmund Tutu, UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon and Oscar winning actor Kate Blanchett. In India, Bollywood actor Aamir Khan and cricketer Sachin Tendulkar supported the campaign. From India-Delhi,Mumbai, Bangalore and fifty other cities joined the list of over 4000 cities across the world to VOTE EARTH. The call to action was fairly simple: turn off lights for one hour and stand up to show action and solidarity on climate change. But the message was much larger and the work that remains to be done even more so. In this way, what began as a symbolic show of support got transformed into a national movement that caught unprecedented attention and an overwhelming support. Reports indicate that at least 5 million people across India participated in Earth Hour by switching off their lights from 8:30-9:30pm on 28th March, thereby making this the largest ever environmental campaign in the country, in terms of public outreach and participation. From the icons of history like The Great Pyramids in Egypt and Eiffel Tower in Paris to the symbols of modern architecture- Empire State Building in New York and Petronas towers in Malaysia, all switched off in support of Earth Hour. So did historical monuments like Qutub Minar, Humanyun's Tomb, Red Fort and Old Fort in Delhi. Grand old educational institutions like Jamia Milia Islamia and Indian Institute of Technology, hotel chains of the ITC Welcome Group , PVR Cinemas, and all offices and facilities of over a 100 top public and private sector organizations- Reserve Bank of India, Infosys, Wipro, HSBC to name a few, added to the long list of landmarks from India that observed Earth Hour. Several youth groups, community organizations, religious groups and governments took ownership of the campaign to help make it a success from Cochin to For its part, the Environment Department of the Govt. of Delhi adopted a proactive approach and appealed to over 2000 resident welfare associations, schools, market traders' associations and the Archaeological Survey of India to turn off non-essential lights in support of the campaign. During that hour, the drop in power demand due to Earth Hour was estimated to be about 600 MW in Delhi. Similarly, there have been reports from other cities, citing savings by the power distribution companies, making the cumulative energy savings to the tune of 1000 MW nationally. However, the impact of Earth Hour should not be measured in power saved alone, but more so in terms of the awareness that it helped spread about the cause and the momentum that it gathered. Earth Hour is indeed a symbolic act and history is testimony to symbolic acts that have triggered great movements. The challenge that remains is to embed this voluntary act as a lifestyle choice and make it a genuine and self-perpetuating movement which merits support due to the benefit contained in the choice. In the global climate order, while much will get decided in the domain of policies and politics, and technologies that take the world to the path of low carbon future will be developed, it is essential to keep climate change on the top of the policy and scientific agenda, with the onus on world leaders, to take the right decisions for the planet. And that is what Earth Hour will continue to strive for. Aarti Khosla COVER STORY The Book brings out the fallacy of abundance of coal related to supply, state of domestic reserve and external supply security challenges.It discusses the problems afflicting the mining of coal including social and environmental concerns and reviews merits and demerits of coal beneficiation and also brings out a range of issues (covering alternative technology choices, clean coal technology, improved technology for power generation) that will be critical for us to move towards an efficient and cleaner coaleconomy in the coming decades. Gangtok and Dehradun to Bangalore. Climate change team READER'S ZONE Reader's Zone Earth Hour 2009 On 28th March this year, beginning on Chatham Island in New Zealand, one of the first places on Earth where dawn strikes, towns and cities in over 80 countries across the globe turned off their lights for an hour, to draw attention to climate change. 2 The Western Ghats perform important hydrological and watershed functions. Approximately 245 million people live in the peninsular Indian states nd Feb 2 , 2009 is celebrated world wide as World Wetlands day to commemorate the signing of Ramsar Convention in 1971 in Iran. There are presently 158 Contracting Parties to the Convention, with 1831 wetland sites, equivalent to 1 7 0 m i l l i o n Mr Rabbi Shergill awarding the First Prize to Ryan h e c t a r e s , International School, Noida designated for inclusion in the Ramsar List of Wetlands of International Importance. At WWF-India this year, World Wetland Day was celebrated with a difference and with an aim to create awareness on the need to protect this highly fragile ecosystem. that receive most of their water supply from rivers originating in the Western Ghats. Thus, the soils and waters of this region sustain the livelihoods of millions of people. With the possible exception of the Indo-Malayan region, no other hotspot impacts the lives of such a large population. South Western Ghats An Introduction The South Western Ghats cover an area of 12,500 km2 in the states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu and harbour a rich floral and faunal diversity which includes 4,000 flowering plants. The faunal diversity includes 48 genera of large and medium sized mammals, 475 species of birds, 60 reptile genera and 313 species of butterflies. This region harbours high levels of endemism including 30 endemic lizard species, 57 endemic snake species, 87 endemic species of amphibians and 84 endemic species of freshwater fishes. Some of the important and unique habitat types Wetlands are some of the world's most alive and productive ecosystems on which several species of birds, fish, amphibians, mammals and human settlements thrive and coexist. They truly bring out the life-sustaining characteristics of water along with its rich cultural and economic values (agriculture and fisheries). Therefore, it is necessary to create awareness on the necessity of conserving this very important ecosystem. As a precursor to the event on Feb 2, a musical extravaganza called 'Aqua Symphony' was held on Jan 31st. Several schools across the city competed with zeal, by presenting their original compositions on the central theme of water and wetlands. The event was held at the WWF-India auditorium. Among those judging the competition were Sam Lal, Editor Blender magazine, Randeep (from the band Men Who Pause) and Gaurav Gilani (from the band Crimson) On Feb 2, World Wetlands Day was f o r m a l l y commemorated with the winning bands- Ryan International, Laxman Public School and G.D. Goenka Public School being awarded. The teams performed G D Goenka World School performing at Aqua Symphony t h e i r w i n n i n g compositions. Famous Indian Pop musician, Rabbi Shergill, was the chief guest at the event. Vandana Singh, WWF-India The Western Ghats, a global Biodiversity Hotspot, extends along the west coast of India and cover an area of about 180,000 km2.Though it has less than 6% of the land area of India, the Western Ghats contain more than 30% of all plant, fish, reptile, amphibian, bird, and mammal species found in India. Like other Biodiversity Hotspots, the Western Ghats have a high proportion of endemic species. The region also has a spectacular assemblage of large mammals and is home to several nationally significant wildlife sanctuaries, tiger reserves, and national parks. The Western Ghats contain numerous medicinal plants and important genetic resources such as the wild relatives of grains, fruits and spices. Mr Ravi Singh, Secretary General & CEO, WWF-India, urged the student community to join in large numbers to ensure that the environment is protected and conserved with the role of each ecosystem in maintaining the ecological balance well understood. Dr Parikshit Gautam, Director Freshwater and Wetlands-WWFIndia affirmed the need for preserving wetland ecosystems and said that such events will raise awareness on the importance of this ecosystem and the need to conserve it . The chief guest Mr Rabbi Shergill, speaking on the occasion, felt that these original compositions by the bands showed the extent of awareness amongst the present generation on the importance of wetlands. Additionally, WWF-India's film on Ladakh, 'Living with Change' was showcased on the day. The film records the testimonials from communities which are coping to survive in a changing ecosystem since the region has several High Altitude Wetlands dotting the arid Trans-Himalayan landscape. Young Climate Savers Website Launched A WWF-India & Tetra Pak initiative After the successful completion of Phase 1 of the Young Climate Savers (YCS) initiative, WWF-India and Tetra Pak announced the launch of the YCS website, in Hyderabad This website is the first Indian website for educating school students on climate change and energy issues. Honorable Speaker of Andhra Pradesh (AP) State Assembly, Shri. K.R Suresh Reddy formally launched the website at a function held at the Bhaskar Auditorium, Birla Science Centre here. Shri Jayesh Ranjan (IAS), Managing Director, AP Tourism Development Board, a well known personality and respected for his support in the field of climate change education and awareness programme, also graced the occasion, and along with other dignitaries from WWFIndia, Tetra Pak and teachers, students from various schools. Southern-Western Ghats The Young Climate Savers is a programme launched with an aim to create awareness across the student fraternity in India on climate change, and through them to reach out to the larger community and to influence them to become 'climate savers'. WWF-India partnered with Tetra Pak in implementing the Young Climate Savers programme. Following up on its commitment to emission reduction, and realizing the importance of educating children on climate change, Tetra Pak partnered with WWF-India in November 2007 for the Young Climate Savers programme. The YCS ,is an education for sustainable development initiative aiming to educate 20,000 school children across India, and through them, to reach out and influence a larger audience on the impacts of climate change and the importance of mitigating it. The YCS initiative is envisioned to be implemented over the course of several years. YCS Phase 1 reaches to over 20000 students at over 200 schools in India. “The rate at which climate change is taking place is extremely alarming. While we take pride in the fact that our packaging is environment friendly, we strongly believe that collective effort is what will finally make a difference. Our partnership with WWF reiterates our commitment to create awareness and motivate the young to promote and lead energy efficient and environmentally sensitive lives. Over the past year, we have achieved our target of 20,000 students and now want to reach out to a larger national and international audience with the launch of the YCS Website.” added Mr. Jaideep Gokhale, Programme Head- Food for Development Office & Environment, Tetra Pak India Pvt. Ltd. KIDS WWF-India, Vishaish Uppal COVER STORY 3 Conserving Wetlands Through Awareness In School Children 24 KIDS POEM : 23 NATURE God has gifted us nature, And he has only created every creature, Where there are no fights, And people have their own rights. Where the birds live happily, And sing sweet songs melodiously, Peace messages Dove brings, and fly freely spreading out their wings. Where there are tall and green trees, Here blows a cool and pleasant breeze, Where we have the rocky mountains, And the wonderful fountains. The farmers harvest their crops, And the rabbit hops, Children play, Chocolates they want is all they say. Here we have the sun's bright glow, And the rivers flow, Here the forests are dark and deep, And the reptiles creep. Why let this beautiful nature destroy, Saving nature is the most valuable thing we should try, Why to waste time, And we should throw away all the crime. Be brave and ignore your fright, To make this nature more bright, Save water and plants, To give nature a wonderful sight. Keeping this nature ever green, And keeping it neat and clean, Is the work of every human being, To give nature a great scene. Written by : Rishika Chatterjee Age :: 11, Springdales School, Class V Area of WWF-India Work k i d s found here include wet evergreen forests and Sholas in the higher elevations. This region is a veritable treasure trove of biodiversity and most of it is still to be studied and understood. The area is also crucial for the ecological goods and services they provide. Forty four rivers originate Map prepared by: IGCMC, WWF-India from here, providing water to several major cities of the states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu. The important rivers that provide water to cities/districts are; the Periyar for Ernakulam, the Chalakkudy for Trichur, the Neyyar and Karamana for Thiruvananthapuram, the Bharatpuzha for Palghat and Meenachil and Muvattupuzha for Kottayam. Forest products provide an important source of fuel wood, fodder, food and shelter to local communities and indigenous groups living in and around them. The tourism value of the area is also very high; managed effectively and equitably, this can provide an important source of livelihood to local and indigenous communities. WWF-India has identified a landscape of about 7,000 km2 south of the Palghat gap as a priority conservation landscape. The area is made up of undulating terrain including the highest mountain peak (Anaimudi) of South India. It spreads across 14 Protected Areas and 11 forest divisions across the states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu and includes a number of other land uses such as tea and coffee plantations, subsistence and commercial agriculture, high density tourism areas as well as important river systems. The landscape comprises of a variety of ecosystems ranging from wet evergreen to dry deciduous to scrub forest including the unique shola ecosystem. This landscape is home to the largest population of Endangered Nilgiri tahr (Nilgiritragus hylocrius), a species endemic to the Western Ghats. Other threatened mammals found in this landscape are the lion-tailed macaque Macaca silenus and the Asian small-clawed otter Aonyx cinerea. Some of the charismatic mega fauna found here include elephant, tiger and gaur. The region is also home to a number of tribal communities and forest-dependent people who help in ensuring the long-term integrity of this unique ecosystem. PONDICHERRY TAMIL NADU KERALA W W F - I n d i a envisaged that a well defined l a n d s c a p e approach would be more effective way to address the conservation issues in Southern Western Ghats. It was envisaged that the Southern Western Ghats Landscape should encompass the central region of Kerala and a d j o i n i n g Anaimalai forests in Tamil Nadu. A rationale for this selection is provided below: • It forms one of the largest contiguous blocks of 'good' forest cover in the Southern-Western Ghats. • It is large enough (approximately 7,000 km2) to be able to 'pilot' an approach to large-scale conservation but at the same time of a scale and scope that was feasible in terms of execution given resource, capacity and political realities. • Part of this landscape has already been identified as a priority by the Kerala Forest Department (KFD). • The area was already fairly well protected;15% of the whole area is covered by a Protected Area network. • Apart from the fact that pressures were manageable, there were a number of potential partners and relatively strong Forest Departments, who could all come together to provide a common effort. The overall aim of the Southern-Western Ghats landscape conservation programme is to ensure the long term ecological security of this landscape based on multi-stakeholder participation and inter-sectoral coordination. The key threats to this landscape, identified through a series of stakeholder meetings and workshops have been identified as: forest conversion, illegal tree felling and poaching, unsustainable extraction of forest products, human-wildlife conflict and unplanned infrastructure development. WWF- India is working on all of these issues with a range of partners within the landscape. WWF has secured support for specifically working in the areas of developing sustainable livelihoods to reduce pressure on forest resources, developing management strategies to address human-elephant conflict, restoring degraded forest areas, and understanding the conservation status of the Endangered Nilgiri tahr. COVER STORY Historically, WWF-India had envisaged a well defined landscape approach with a reasonably strong presence in the region. The organization has been actively involved in the Western Ghats region since the early nineties through the Biodiversity 'Hotspots' Conservation Programme (1993-2005) with support from the MacArthur Foundation and the Ford Foundation. Over the years it has interacted with stakeholders like the State Forest Departments, the research Institutes and the local communities. The WWF Species Programme is represented in the Western Ghats through its activities related to conservation of tiger and elephant habitats in the Nilgiri landscape region. The Southern-Western Ghats also emerged as a priority terrestrial and freshwater ecoregion for WWF with the entire Western Ghats complex identified as one of the Global 200: Priority Ecoregions for global conservation. ANDHRA PRADESH KANATAKA 4 Awareness Activities The human elephant Land use pattern and conflict in the Anayirangal elephant sightings in valley, located in the Anayirangal Munnar forest division, Only 138 families have Kerala, has become one of settled so far but even the most pressing issues these have not been able with the local villagers and to harvest any cultivated district administration. This crops due to the damage conflict has increased very caused by elephants. It is recently. The main unimaginable to think of reasons for the increase in the scale of conflict when this conflict is the loss of all 661 families will settle in habitat and habitat this area. fragmentation which block the normal migration The following data has corridors of the animals. been compiled and Human-elephant conflict in mapped to understand the Anayirangal is a major zone, scale and level of threat to human life, conflict: property and crops. The lone tuskers and elephant • Land use and cropping herds are raiding crops patterns Families rendered homeless due to human - elephant conflict. and damaging houses. • Elephant populations People are unable to walk freely through the roads and paths even and their movements during daytime within settlements due to constant movement of • Socio economic data of settlements elephants. Two women lost their lives in 2008 due to elephant attacks, • Data on resource use by the local villagers making this an urgent problem to be studied. On the basis of the above, the possible corridors for the movement of Habitat fragmentation due to human demographic pressure has elephants and the existing problems for elephants in using these increased. The elephants in the Anayirangal region has increasingly corridors have been identified. A breeding population of 27 elephants isolated during the last decade. The free movement of elephants having a sex ratio of 1(male):4(female) have been utilizing this valley towards Mathikettan Shola National Park and Pappathichola is and are frequently moving towards Mathikettan Shola National Park. blocked by expansion of old human settlements, creation of new The main movement path from Anayirangal valley to Mattuppetty, settlements and the development of uncontrolled tourism. The large Munnar area through old Devikulam and Silent valley has been number of resorts in the northern side of Anayirangal especially at blocked by resorts and school zone at Chinnakkanal and Vilakku area Chinnakkanal, block the movement of elephant As a short term measure, the Settlement Vs Food Crop Damage from October 2007 to June 2008 towards Mattuppettytribal department has 350 Gunderla region. erected a solar power fence in one part of the newly 300 Over the past one year, the created tribal settlement. project has collated Preliminary surveys have 250 detailed information on the indicated that this has in fact 200 nature of the problem, the shifted the human elephant loss to property and crops conflict to nearby 150 due to the conflict and the settlements. Out of eighty behavioral patterns of the elephant attack incidents in 100 elephants to help develop the year 2008, there were a mitigation strategy. four deaths, six severely 050 Banana injured and sixty six people Tapbca 000 Preliminary data collection suffered minor injuries. Raggi in seven selected villages Cahans in Anayirangal valley has Some further studies are Watermelon shown that the conflict has also being conducted with Beans Cabbage increased tremendously the help of the Kerala Forest after the land assignment Department and local for 661 landless tribal villagers to comprehensively Settlement families in eucalyptus and evaluate and assess the pine plantation. The area and explore possible plantations done by the co-existence options for both Kerala Forest Department was to protect and improve the catchments human and elephants. of Anayirangal reservoir and had become a good habitat for elephants. World Wetlands Day Celebration Andhra Pradesh and Shimla Andhra Pradesh - Essay Competition Painting Competition Himachal Pradesh - Folk Song Theater Activity STAFF AWARD hi nn ng al ak M na l ul at ha ra Pa Mu tt n Pu tha uka d Sh thu dlkk ul an pp ka ara am ra pa Est a n Si dym te ng e Su uka ttu n ry an d a m el y N AC Vl la Th kk id u ir N AC WWF-India's Meritorious Service award was conferred to Dr. Harish Kumar Guleria, Landscape Coordinator, Pilibhit Project Office, WWF-India for the commendable and dedicated work performed by him. C 1 N An a yl ra AC Damage (Acre) 30 COVER STORY 5 Mitigating Human-Elephant Conflict In Anayirangal Let us join hands to wish Dr. Guleria the best in his career ahead. EVENTS He joined the organization in year 2001. Due to his hard work the conservation efforts in UP part of Terai Arc landscape have steadily progressed and it has shown impact on ground, both in the community areas and with the forest department. Dr. Guleria has led the team in an exemplary manner to implement the tiger conservation work. STAFF AWARDS M. Rameshan Dr. Guleria 22 21 The Common Birds and Mammals of Andhra Pradesh: There exists little information on the biodiversity of Andhra Pradesh. To bridge this gap in knowledge, WWF has published a book on common birds and mammals of Andhra Pradesh. This coloured, hand-illustrated book contains information on 150 birds and 60 mammals. It also throws light on the various wildlife laws that prevail in the state and describes the various protected areas of Andhra Pradesh in detail. The book is aimed at young students and amateur naturalists willing to discover the wilderness areas of Andhra Pradesh and will perhaps be the first in the series of books to describe the natural heritage of Andhra Pradesh. Ongoing Projects Interpretation of Nallamalai and Arakku Valley: The Eastern Ghats and the Nallamalis are repositories of a varied habitat, rich in wildlife and natural resources. There is little information regarding the biodiversity of these areas, especially for general reading. Under its attempt to promote ecotourism, APSO is joining hands with the AP Tourism Development Corporation to prepare user-friendly field guides to Nallamalai forest and the Arakku Valley. This shall be initiated after a thorough study of the biodiversity in the Araku Valley and Nallamalais. The field guide will contain information on the commonly found flora and fauna in the region. t lan wP Ne ku C ak Vil u NA k ak Vil akku Vik m i di r Th kkula C NA al a Th nely rya Su anelly ry am Su and sm guk gavila ettu Sin m u n m pa n d y a Sha r dy nka uku Sha akath tate Es mb Sha ppara hu Put kanal iya lam Per ikku y thad Pan ppulkud a Pach d tuka ny Mut ra Colo a Muth ra dy ah Multa pennaku yp Kozh akanal n Chin m Ra B.L angal ir An a y AC 80 N A C N 30 1 Community-based Conservation at Kawal Wildlife Sanctuary: Through two successful fund raising events, APSO collected a corpus to run a two-year project at Kawal Wildlife Sanctuary, Adilabad. This dry deciduous teak and bamboo forest is the second most important tiger habitat in the state. The project aims to spread environmental awareness among the local tribal groups especially among the Gonds, the Nayakpods, the Kolams and the Totis. Interested individuals from different hamlets will be trained in alternative livelihood opportunities. The Integrated Tribal Development Authority (ITDA) and A.P. Forest Department are supporting APSO in this venture. House Shed Minor Severe Death human interference, and has tremendous potential as a haven for urban biodiversity. This upcoming study will focus on faunal diversity of the campus. Through such inventories, APSO is aiming to highlight the importance of institutions in conserving the wildlife of Hyderabad. Inventory of the Biodiversity at University of Hyderabad: The Hyderabad Central University has a large campus with little Himachal Pradesh The Himachal Pradesh office has undertaken project relating to various issues specific to the region:“Income generation activities for sustainable development of tribal people in Kinnaur district of Himachal Pradesh” under Border Area Development Project is one such activity. The aim of the project was “capacity building of local community to enhance their livelihood”. With this perspective natives were exposed to various livelihood enhancement activities through self help groups based on local requirements and local produce. Training programs were held in carpet weaving, shawl weaving, tourist guide course, and river rafting course. An Environmental Awareness Programme for High Altitude Wetlands Conservation was conducted amongst different stakeholders including defence personnel in Kinnaur and Pooh district of Himachal Pradesh. Pamphlets were distributed regarding wise use of wetlands. COVER STORY Upgradation and modernization of watermills (Gharat) for the sustainable development in the hilly region-Kullu district. The project aimed towards identifying total number of water mill sites, their present status, location and uses; set up demonstration units for upgradation of water mill through demonstration, workshops and field visits. Surveys were conducted in Manali, Kullu and Banjar tehsil. 1020 watermills were documented out of which 738 watermills were found in working condition and would be upgraded. The Himachal office has documented more than 18 high altitude wetlands (above 3000 m) in Chamba, Kullu and Kinnaur district. To involve all the stakeholder in this conservation programme, WWF have organised various environmental awareness training and workshops for wetlands conservation through out Himachal Pradesh. Among different stakeholders are students, teachers, NGOs, tour operators, tourist guide, forest field staff, researchers, Mahila Mandal and Indian Army. Awareness material was circulated to impart knowledge to the public in large about the need to preserve the wetlands. WWF-India, South Western Ghats Programme EVENTS Andhra Pradesh 6 Turtle Conservation at Rushikulaya - 2009 The turtle program for the season commenced in the first week of December 2008 with the monitoring of congregating turtles off the Rushikulaya shores. Sorties into the sea were made once every seven days, to monitor the shifting turtle congregation. The information on the congregation was shared with the motorized fishermen of Kontiagarh, Gokhurkuda and Purunabandh along with request to them not to fish in those areas. The sorties continued till mass nesting started. Cold water inlet Grass feeeding drum The mass nesting started on the night of 14th February 2009. The 'arribada' (mass nesting) lasted up to the 20th, during which period our volunteers were patrolling the rookery day & night to keep off feral dogs, jackals and hyenas. Thereafter we installed the 3 kilometer long mesh net fence from the water body at Gokhurkuda shore to halfway up to Kantiagarh on the north and again from the Forest Department watch camp at the southern tip of Gokhurkuda shore to halfway up to Purunabandh on the south. Support for the drum made of clay and rock Fuel feeding chamber Oil and water outlet The main impact on forests is the fuel wood consumption for the distillation units. It has been estimated that about 500 kg of fuel wood per year per acre is being utilized for the distillation process. The main tree species used for fuel are Atalantia racemosa, Anogeissus latifolia, Pterocarpus marsupium, Randia brandisi, Albizzia amara, Cinnamonum malabaricum, Vitex leucoxylon and Albizia odoratissima. Some of these are hardwood species and are also used by wildlife. Lemon grass is generally harvested 2 to 4 times a year depending upon the rainfall and the latitude of the area of cultivation. The cultivated area ranges from 0.75 to 5 acres per household depending on the availability of labour within the family and in the settlement. Each household or two/three households together own a distillation unit which is manufactured locally and is available from the nearby local towns. Oil can also be sold to the traders of these towns. The cost of a litre of oil ranges from Rs. 350-450 based on the Citral content of the oil. A deep water body had developed naturally in between the two stretches of nets which could not be crossed by land predators. Four gates had been provided along the fence to allow for local villagers to go back and forth from sea. Shri Murlidhar C. Bhandare (State Governor) greatly appreciated the efforts made to protect the hatchling. overhead. Occasionally crackers have to be used to drive off the avian predators. The hatchlings were then released near the waves to allow them safe passage to the sea. The entire rookery was cordoned off, leaving a 300 meter stretch for the tourist to indulge in rescue and release of hatchlings. Awareness signages were installed at tourist entry points to sensitize them on the dos and don'ts while at the rookery. The hatching started from 3rd April , 2009. Hatchlings emerge from their nests starting from early evening, peak through the night and thin out with dawn. At night generally hatchlings find their way to the sea safely. The dusk and morning periods are vital, as the entire team, donning gloves have to scurry all over the rookery to pick up hatchlings as they emerge. They (the team) have to reach the An award was initiated for the best team of volunteers and it was presented at the end of the project. This award is in memory of Mr. W. Krishna, a community volunteer and a dedicated team leader for the past three years of our Turtle Conservation Project at Rushikulaya Rookery. Impact of Improvements on the unit and the process • The grate is designed to burn 8 kgs of fuel/hr, hence the fuel consumed per batch is estimated to be 24 kgs/batch (the batch time is assumed to be 3hrs). There would be a saving of almost 40%-50% of fire wood consumption. Hatchlings heading towards the sea EVENTS WWF-India has examined the distillation units and has decided to first improve the design of the individual units to decrease the fuel wood consumption in each distillation process. TIDE, an NGO based in Bangalore which specializes in design of fuel efficient distillation units, is a partner for this activity and is helping set up the modified units and monitor implementation. hatchlings before they are picked up by avian predators hovering WWF-India, Orissa state office Detailed surveys have been carried out in settlements involved in the cultivation of the grass within the landscape. It has been found that lemon grass is being cultivated within the Chinnar and Indira Gandhi Wildlife Sanctuaries and the forest division of Marayoor. A very small amount of area in Malayatoor and Munnar forest divisions is also under lemon grass cultivation. The total area of cultivation of lemon grass in the landscape is approximately 2050 acres. Orissa WWF-India Orissa state office Several tribal communities in the landscape have shifted to settled agriculture and started cultivating lemon grass. The crop is preferred by these communities as it provides an assurance of income in the drought seasons but is not preferred by wildlife. It is cultivable in soil with low fertility; requires minimal labour inputs; has a local market and easy access to loans for tribals for establishing distillation units. Conservation Activities @ Vishaish Uppal COVER STORY 7 State Activities and Event Reducing Use Of Fuel Wood In Production Of Lemon Grass Oil 20 Mousuni Island, 24 km2, is a sea-facing island in the Bay of Bengal with a population of about 20,000. While the population on the island has been on the increase, the size of the island has been diminishing due to sea-level rise. Cyclones and tidal surges have further destroyed the lives and livelihoods of the communities by breaching embankments, wrecking their homes and destroying their harvests due to salt-water incursion from the sea. Lack of climate adaptation strategies and infrastructure will leave them with no option but to become climate refugees in the future. WWF- India has adopted a two-pronged approach to adaptation on Mousuni. While focusing on the immediate needs of disaster management and relief, they are also providing long-term adaptation measures to the next generation of residents. This has been attempted through the Climate Adaptation Centre which houses an electronic Early Warning System to warn villagers of oncoming disasters. The centre also runs a book bank which loans students educational material to help enhance their future prospects. The existing distillation units were studied to look at their efficacy and outputs. Various measures were taken and trials of distillation at different conditions were carried out. Process field testing of the conventional citronella oil distillation unit was carried out in October 2008. The required data was collected after running the unit for two days continuously and holding discussions with the people who use it regularly. Discussions enabled the team to record the process/steps used by people (like drying of grass, cutting etc) which is also important along with the actual distillation process. events The Early Warning System has been linked to Jadavpur University in Kolkata and will receive messages in the likelihood of extreme weather events like cyclones or storms. The Centre also houses relief material like stretchers, torches and medical aid. An organized Disaster Management Team, comprising of village youth has been put together to mobilize the village community towards safety in the event of a disaster. Chimney Speaking at the inauguration of the Adaptation Centre, Anurag Danda, Head of WWF -India's Sundarbans Programme said that, “Mousuni Island is in peril. Its neighbouring island, Sagar, is recording a relative sea level rise of 3.14 mm per year which is alarming. We have to work towards increasing the adaptive capacities of the communities before it is too late.” water outlet Insulation bricks Perforated plate Other adaptation strategies introduced include re-introduction of indigenous salt-tolerant paddy to farmers on the island. As the market value of this variety (tal mugur) is not far behind other high-yielding varieties, farmers on the island have been successful in maintaining their livelihood without having to worry about losing it to salt water incursion. The Climate Adaptation Centre provides paddy seeds to the farmers and also holds information about the various varieties of paddy, their market values and government schemes available to benefit them. Fuel feeding Door Ash door Oil and water outlet Cold water inlet According to Arjan Berkhuysen, Delta Expert, WWFNetherlands, “These problems are similar in deltas all over the world. WWF is looking for natural solutions that respect the dynamics of the system while helping people towards sustainable development in the face of climate change”. On the basis of the above trials and tests, the individual distillation unit design has been modified. Some components of the unit have been redesigned and fabricated. These have been transferred to Thayanakudi village in the Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary. The unit has been installed and further modified on site by end February 2009. The modified unit has been run and relevant measures taken to test its efficacy. Though the unit is being installed in one village, all eco development committees in the sanctuary have been a part of this process. Meetings and discussions have been held with them to enable them to monitor and observe the trials in the field. Some members from each committee will be present to see the modifications and installations to enable future scaling up of the technology. • As the steam does not lose any energy by absorption all through its journey it will speed up the process and the oil will start coming faster than the previous tras shows additional process. The quantity of oil extracted will also be more. • The working environment will be cleaner. P. Mullai COVER STORY Vishaish Uppal The islands of the Sundarbans, in the Bay of Bengal are witnessing and struggling against the negative impacts of a changing environment in the form of tidal surges, cyclones, increased soil and water salinity and sea-level rise. While 40 percent of the 102 islands (on the Indian side) are under forest cover, the remaining area is inhabited by local communities who are losing their homes, land and fields. WWF-India, in partnership with WWF-Netherlands, Hewlett Packard and GTZ, is working with communities on Mousuni Island, which is the second most vulnerable island, to help them cope with and adapt to climate change while increasing their resilience against high intensity events. To do so WWF has initiated several adaptation strategies including the recent inauguration of a Climate Adaptation Centre on March 29, 2009. Regional Climate Change Programme, WWF- India EVENTS 19 Climate Adaptation Centre Inaugurated At Sundarbans 8 Though, the northern geographic limit of the Nilgiri tahr is Nilgiris (the southern limit being Tiruvannamalai), the species was known to occur in Agumbe Ghats in Karnataka (about 200 km north of its present range) even a few decades ago (Davidar 1978). Nilgiri tahr inhabits montane grasslands at elevations of 1200 to 2600 m above mean sea level but have been observed to exist in elevation starting from 500m. The preferred habitat is grasslands with rocky cliffs. The present range is restricted along a narrow stretch of 400 km between Nilgiri Hills in the north and Ashambu Hills in the South (11°30' N - 8°20'N). Reportedly, the estimated number of Nilgiri tahr is about 2200 - 2500 individuals (Forest deportment census reports 2008) in the wild. Nilgiri tahr is a social animal found in mixed herds composed of adult females and their young. Old males associate in larger mixed herds during the breeding season, but are often solitary or in small all male groups. Female herds inhabit particular home ranges, adult males will move between these groups. There is significant dimorphism between adult male and female (Rice, 1990; Prater, 1971). The main breeding season (rut) is during the monsoon period and young may be present throughout the year. The gestation period is about 6 months. It is mostly preyed by leopard and wild dog. The species is listed in Schedule I of the Indian Wildlife (Protection) Act 1972 which gives it a special protection status. It is also categorized as an Endangered species (IUCN 2006). The reasons for the decline of tahr populations have not been fully understood. Despite several studies over the years, what we have is only rough estimations of Nilgiri tahr populations. The species have always been under severe stress on account of the construction of numerous hydroelectric projects, timber felling and planting monocultures of Eucalyptus and wattles. All these development activities, especially the plantation activities affect the heart of the tahr habitat, which are the grasslands-sholas. In this background, it becomes an urgent necessity that a comprehensive study is initiated in the hills of Tamil Nadu and Kerala to understand the present population and ecological requirements of Nilgiri tahr. Initial activities towards this included the following: • Working out possible locations of Nilgiri tahr using a digital elevation model. This revealed that greater attention needed to be paid to cliff areas; • Using these new criteria surveys were initiated in the Mukurthi National Park which is the northern most habitat of the Nilgiri tahr. Searching individual cliffs yielded very good sighting compared to earlier work. Now a rapid estimation of locations on the ground is being carried out; • Information has been collected on the population structure,behaviour, habitat use, food habits and distribution of this population. Along with this, impacts of human activities including t o u r i s m , i s a l s o b e i n g assessed. Further surveys on other populations are to be carried out in the coming months; • Since the ultimate aim of the programme is to develop and implement a coordinated conservation strategy for the long-term survival of the Nilgiri tahr, WWF is facilitating the formation of an alliance for the conservation of the species. The first meeting t o w a r d s this was held in Coimbatore and a number of groups present, signed a common charter towards this. This will be followed by further work towards the formalization and ratification of this charter. The Black Necked Crane (BNC), (Grus nigricollis), is one of the high altitude crane among the 15 species found in the world, which during breeding is confined to high altitude wetlands and marshes, of the Quinghai-Tibetan Plateau and eastern Ladakh to Sichuan province. The wintering populations of the crane are found at lower altitudes in Quinghai, on the Yunnan Guizhou Plateau, north eastern Bhutan. In India, so far, Sangti Valley in the north west Arunachal Pradesh, is known to be the only wintering habitat of black-necked crane . However, this year at Pangchen Valley of Zemithang, in the north western corner of the state, bordering China in the north and Bhutan in the west, three cranes were recorded in mid-November. Though there were sporadic reports by local villagers, these cranes, locally known as Thungdungkarma , visit this valley almost every year and stay for 30-45 days. For the first time a photographic evidence of the bird in this valley was collected by the villagers. In India, although the wintering of the crane has been reported in the past from the Apatani Valley in Arunachal Pradesh and Moinabari Forest and Buxa Tiger Reserve in northern West Bengal, Sangti Valley and now Pangchen Valley are perhaps the only wintering sites where the BNC still visits every year. Nyamjang Chu*, which originated in China flows through the Pangchen Valley in southern direction and enters Bhutan as Manas River after joining Tawang Chu . The valley suitable for BNC has been found to be from Brokenthang (27º43′ 51.04″ and 91º42′ 51.08″ E) to Zemithang (27º42′ 38.47″ N and 91º43′ 39.69″ E) which is nearly 3km in length with an average altitude of 6920ft. The average width of the valley has been found to be 0.30kms and the flow of water in this part of the river is gentle with many small seasonal islands and grasslands on both the banks. According to the local villagers, earlier the BNCs used to use one Alnus forest patch, very near to Zemithang settlement area for roasting. However, this year, most of the time, all the three BNCs were found on the other side of the river which is diagonally nearly 1.5km away, towards north-west, from the Alnus forest patch. The Black Necked Crane is classified as Vulnerable (VU C1) in the IUCN Red List 2008, listed in Appendix I of CITES, Appendices I and II of the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS or Bonn Convention) and listed as 'threatened' by Birdlife International. It is also one of the 28 bird species selected as a priority for CEPF investment. It has been categorised as a Schedule I species under the Wildlife (Protection) Act of India, (1972). As there is a religious ban on hunting among the local Monpa communities of the area, the major threat on the wintering habitat of the BNC is mainly due to road construction activities which is in progress on both the sides of the river. However, as the roads under construction are very crucial from the Indian defense point of view, there is an urgent need to find out suitable ways to ensure both safety of the BNC and its habitat . Conclusion In the past ,most of the research work has been done concentrating the Nilgiri tahr so the actual estimation, distribution in wild cannot be estimated, as most of these studies are done at very short intervals confined to spaces which are to be potential habitats for the tahr distribution. Other than these, no newer areas are been surveyed to see their distribution and population. This leads to chances of missing potential habitats, and eventually results in poor population estimates. There may be chances that the tahr uses these habitats for local migration, that cannot be backed up due to lack of data. In order to fill these gaps the current study is being done to get population estimates of the species and their distribution. This would help us in planning the management strategies required for conservation of the habitat and the species. P. P Predict * chu- means river PROJECTS UPDATES The present study is focusing on finding out the number of pocketed populations, connectivity among sub-population etc. because it is an endemic species with narrow range of distribution. Their distributional range is highly fragmented, and the population dynamics are not reported anywhere. Species with specific habitat preference and high degree of endemism are less adaptable to environmental changes. Studies on similar species (like the big horn species) have reported that the population with less than 50 individuals has been wiped out within 50 years and these sensitive species need at least 100 individuals for its long-term survival. Thus it is important to identify the pocketed population, present status of population in their distributional range, to Second Wintering Habitat Of Black Necked Crane In India ensure the long term survival of the species. Pankaj Chandan Nilgiri tahr (Nilgiritragus hylocrius), a mountain goat endemic to southern Western Ghats, is confined to the higher altitudes of Tamil Nadu and Kerala. A shy and wary relative of the Himalayan tahr (Hemitragus jemlahicus) , the Nilgiri tahr limits its movements within an altitude range of 1200 m to 2600 m. At present, two established and viable populations are known from the Nilgiris and high ranges of Kerala, while smaller fragmented populations are known from Anamalais, Palni hills and Meghamalai and Kalakkad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve. Ameen Ahmed COVER STORY 9 Nilgiri Tahr- A Special Study 18 GORSHING GANGK Snout of GORSHING GANGK An awareness drive amongst the local communities was also conducted along the river bank to ensure community participation prior to reintroduction of these species into the Ganga.This drive covered the area below the Sandeep Behera 2. 3. Sandeep Behera The target reintroduction area was very well suited for the release. The site was selected after a survey was conducted by the state forest department officials and WWF-India. The area has been inhabited by wild Gharials in fairly recent times. A female Gharial (3.63 m) inhabited this area as late as 1994. Another Gharial was rescued here in 2006-07 and released into the Ganga at a spot further up stream near Bijnor. Also, easily recognizable features of Gharial habitat like perennial stream with deep pools, undisturbed mid-river sand bars, high and steep sand banks for nesting, and multistream braided channels with stagnant eddy counter-currents occur in this stretch of the river. 1. 1. Shri A.K. Divadi (Chief Conservator of Forest-Meerut) and Dr. Parikshit Gautam (Director Freshwater & Wetlands, WWF-India) 2 & 3. Gharial being released A total of 131 Gharials were released in a phased manner. These Gharials were bred at the Kukrail Gharial Rehabilitation Centre at Lucknow and belonged to the 2005-2006 batches. They were in the age group of 2-3.8 years.In the first phase 60 Gharials were released in which there were 18 males and 42 females.They measured approximately 1.20-1.68 m in length and weighed approximately 7-12 kg. In the second phase 71 Gharials were released of which there were 19 males and 52 females. These weighed 7-16 kg and measured approximately 1.20-1.80 m in length. Intensive post-release monitoring is underway and it has been observed that these individuals had already negotiated upto 10 kilometer within the first few days downstream and 2.5 km upstream of the release site. These release programmes will be sustained for a number of years until a resident breeding population of Gharial is established at a favourable location in the river. The objectives of the reintroduction will be achieved through people's participation and regular monitoring of sections of the Ganga River and studying the response of the released Gharial in terms of ability to permanently adapt to the environment. Rescue operations for Gharial individuals will also be done, which could drift downstream of protected areas. The local communities have expressed support and solidarity for ensuring the return of the Gharial in this area. With the success of this project it is hoped that these species sees a revival PROJECTS UPDATES - Pema Wange, Lohit Gogoi, Pijush Kumar Dutta and Rakesh Soud The status of the crocodilian species Gharial,Gavialis gangeticus, has recently been revised by the IUCN to Critically Endangered. The surviving population is spread in less than half a dozen riverine habitats e.g.-Ken, Son, Mahanadi, Chambal, Girwa and Ramganga. Estimates indicate that about 1400 survive in the wild. In order to address the conservation needs of this species, it is necessary to locate viable alternative habitats which supplement the extremely few habitats where the species currently occur. projects Sandeep Behera The glaciers of this area act as a water source for most of the high altitude wetlands found in the area. The glaciers and all the lakes of this area are also the main source of water for two most important rivers of Tawang and West Kameng districts the Kameng river and the Tawangchu river. The Tawangchu River flows through Bhutan and enters India as Manas and the Kameng River flows through Assam as the Bhorali River and both these rivers are among the major tributaries of the Brahmaputra River. Thus any disturbance in these glaciers is likely to have an impact on lives of millions of people from Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and also Bhutan who are settled here and are dependent on the catchments areas of these rivers. Pijush Kumar Dutta So far no scientific information regarding the impact of Climate Change on this glacier is available. However, according to Mr. Pasang from Thembang village, one of the Yak and Sheep herders, who has been visiting this area since last 20 years for summer grazing and was present with the team, informed that since last five years this glacier has moved up from one of the lakes, Khampa Tso , which is located nearly 1.5 km south of the glacier snout. According to him this glacier is the source of water for the lake and as the lake water appears like white milk, they call it Khampa Tso. However, during this visit many water bodies in the form of lakes were found in between the snout of the Glacier and Khampa Tso which according to him are new and don't have any name for them and this means that this glacier has receded nearly 1.5 km in last five years. This needs proper scientific investigation through satellite based studies to document the impact of climate change on this and other glaciers of the area. According to the local information, there are many such Gangk (glacier) in this area some of which areGangri Gangk and Sangya Phu Gangk, located in the north eastern direction and north of this Gorshing Gangk. Pijush Kumar Dutta, WAL Office - WWF-India WWF-India WAL team with villagers from Thembang during the second baseline survey of Thembang Bapu Community Conserved Area, were able to reach the snout of one of the Glaciers which locally the villagers call GORSHING GANGK (in Monpa dialect Gangk means Glacier). The team led by Mr. Pema Wange and Lohit Gogoi along with village elders were able to reach the snout of the glacier after trekking for 5 days from Thembang village. Hastinapur Wildlife Sanctuary, the Ganga river and its environs downstream to the Ganga Irrigation Barrage at Narora which has been declared as a Ramsar site with its own conservation implications.The area is currently the focus of dolphin conservation programme of WWF-India which will definitely benefit Gharial conservation, monitoring and protection. January 29th and 12th February 2009 can be marked on WWF-India's calendar as historical. In a task that was no less than being termed as herculean, WWF-India along with the UP State Forest Department reintroduced the endangered Gharial into river Ganga at the Hastinapur Wildlife Sanctuary (HWLS), U.P. Glaciers in the Indian Himalayas are a major source of water for three large river systems of India-Indus,Ganga and Brahmaputra. The Brahmaputra basin has 662 glaciers, which is only 12% of total number of glaciers recorded from the three river basins. However, most of the glaciers of the Brahmaputra River basin present in Arunachal Pradesh are still unexplored with very little information on the impact of Climate Change on these glaciers . Pijush Kumar Dutta PROJECTS UPDATES 17 WWF-India Reintroduces Gharials Into River Ganges Visit To Gorshing Glacier of Western Arunachal Pradesh 10 Explaining the innovative technique, Professor Ura from the University of Tokyo said, "Precise underwater movements and sonar-range of dolphins can be observed even in shallow water with a six - hydrophone system. An acoustic data logger system has also been demonstrated that can count the number of dolphins." The umbrella array deployed in Ganges at Karnabas since November 2008 has yielded useful data. The findings have opened a window to the Gangetic Dolphin behavior which until now was an underwater mystery. The dolphin data from the array deployed in November 2008 at Karnabas has given clues to parental behavior of these blind dolphins. Dolphins maintain a nursery where they leave their calves in secure pools of water and come there regularly to feed and take care of them. A paper titled “Long-term Real-time monitoring of the Ganges River Dolphins using Integrated Observation System using Multiple acoustic arrays” has been recently presented at Sixth International symposium on Underwater Technology '09 held at Wuxi, China. objective fishery assessments against the MSC standard. Many small fisheries, such as those taking part in the trial, are not in a position to provide comprehensive data sets. The aim of the new approach is to provide small-scale and datadeficient fisheries with an alternative route to certification against the MSC's standard, while maintaining the scientific rigour that characterises the MSC programme. The analysis of the data obtained since November 2008 till February 2009 was also done and the presence of dolphins at a particular time, distance and direction was believed to come up with some diurnal trends. The same equipment is also used to assess and confirm dolphin number at Karnabas and also for smaller stretches of river The thrust now is to elucidate further knowledge about the parental behavior and maintenance of nursery by these dolphins. At the same time we hope to get more information on behavior patterns. International MSC team in conversation with local fishermen In May 2007, the MSC Technical Advisory Board approved the draft methodological guidance for use in a number of trial fisheries assessments which will be conducted by third party certifiers. The aim of the trials is to allow for practical testing, reviewing and evaluation of the guidance methodology to ensure its effectiveness. The findings will help sharpen and increase the scope of WWFIndia's River Dolphin programme. WWF-India's work, in partnership with local community members in Narora has shown encouraging results as the pressure on the river system and the dolphin population has reduced. Our work has also resulted in improved living conditions of villagers thus strengthening the link between conservation and livelihoods. Fisheries from Africa, Latin America, Asia and Europe are involved in these trial assessments. Pre-analysis of community- based fisheries in India WWF-India began the “Pre-analysis of community based and other fisheries in India for certification (Ecolabelling)” project to set up a concept of sustainable fisheries in every corner of the country. On the matrix of labeling eco-friendly fishery and fishery practice, a survey was conducted during November 2003 to April 2004 to identify ecologically sustainable fishing practice in the coastal zones of West Bengal, Kerala, Gujarat and Tamil Nadu. The objective of the project was to identify community-based fisheries from the different states of India that are ecologically sustainable with respect to their catch, culture, crafts and gears, community participation, and environment. Through the pre-analysis process, the CommunityBased Certification (CBC) methodology was effectively and efficiently tested over a large area for identifying the most promising candidates for certification in the region. The pre-analysis project report recommended moving forward with pre-assessments with the oil sardine (Sardinella longiceps) fishery and a squid (Doryteuthis sibogae) fishery, both located in Kerala. Gangetic River Dolphin. WWF-India and Fishermen Welfare Society (FWS) A one day workshop was held in Kochi in to create an awareness of MSC certification among the coastal fishers, NGO's, Government organisatons, exporters and all other organisations involved in the development of fisheries in Kerala. In taking the MSC certification forward, Fishermen Welfare Society (FWS) Kollam evinced great interest and hence WWF-India identified them as co-clients in taking forward the process of MSC certification. The objective of such societies is to develop institutional mechanisms required to enhance income of small scale fishermen from fishing activities.. About 1000 fishermen are members of this body, and is organised through 5 primary societies in five villages of Kollam coast. The FWS organised NGO interventions in fish marketing and the first fish marketing centre was established in the village of Pallithottam in the early eighties. The “Pallithottam Model” spread to the adjoining villages. Pallithottam Thankassery belt in Kollam district was identified as the unit for certification. The oil sardine fishery of Kerala by the gill netters along the Thankassery Pallithottam region of Kollam coast will be assessed against the MSC guidelines.This pilot assessment will be taking place in parallel with a 'conventional' assessment and separate notifications will be provided in relation to the 'conventional' MSC assessment. MSC Certification field visit MSC Certification team comprising of Dr. Jim Andrews, Lead assessor, Moody Marines, UK, Ms. Anna Battesse, MSC, UK, Dr. Appukuttan, Expert Assessor, India, Ms. Alison Cross, WWF-US and Vinod Malayilethu, WWF-India ,visited the area of certification as part of the assessment field visit and held a series of interactions with the fishery managers from state fisheries department, Fishery scientists from various fisheries institutes like Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute, Kochi, Central Institute of Fisheries Technology, Kochi for getting an insight into the status of oil sardine as well as squid fishery in Kerala. The assessment team held a stakeholders workshop at Kollam for understanding the community perceptions on the oil sardine fishery in the certification area. Details discussions were held with the fishermen community leaders and the fishers of the Fishermen Welfare Society, Kollam, the co-clients in the certification programme. It is hoped that this role model in MSC program would encourage more participation from other fishing communities hence promoting sustainable fisheries. Vinod Malayilethu PROJECTS UPDATES Monitoring of Dolphins through hydrophone systems. Pre-assessment of community based fisheries in Kerala WWF-India moved to the second phase of this work with a preassessment of community based fisheries in Kerala. As a first step of the pre-assessment work, a survey was carried out in July August 2007 along nine coastal districts of Kerala namely Thiruvananthapuram, Kollam, Allapuzha, Ernakulam, Thrissur, Kozhikode, Malappuram, Kannur and Kasargode to reaffirm the status of the candidate fishery and the interest of the fishers in the certification programme, as certification would not be successful without community support. It was observed during the preassessment survey in the coastal districts of Kerala that oil sardine played a vital role in the daily diet of the fishing community and contributes to about 15% of the total marine fish production in India. Marine Programme, WWF-India. WWF-India has been actively working for conservation of this highly endangered dolphin since 1996 which is threatened due to anthropogenic pressures and human intervention. In 2006, WWFIndia initiated a partnership between IIT Delhi and University of Tokyo to further develop insight into behaviour and mating patterns of the mammal. Various important points regarding the inter-click interval and the acoustic processing time in the dolphin brain have been discovered using the array system. As an extension of data analysis, we have confirmed that dolphins sense an average 20 m distance using its sonar system by sending clicks and gathering information by reflected clicks. In the forthcoming months, the umbrella array will be deployed at the same location for another four months to understand more behavior patterns and Inter click interval details. During February '2009 trials, this array was shifted near the calf pool for a week to decrease the distance from the supposed pool and get more streamlined information. Sandeep Behera, WWF-India WWF-India's ongoing partnership with University of Tokyo, Institute of Industrial Science and Indian Institute of Technology(IIT), Delhi have proven to be effective in understanding the behaviour of the blind Ganges River Dolphin (Platanista gangetica). WWF-Canon / François Xavier PELLETIER PROJECTS UPDATES 11 WWF-India, Saving River Dolphins From Extinction 16 India with a coast line of 8055 kms, supports millions of people in the fishery sector and contributes significantly to the national and state GDP. However marine fisheries production has reached a plateau and only marginal increase can be predicted in future. Nearly 85% of fisheries in India are contributed by the small scale sector. Historically small scale sector fisheries has been stable vis-avis mechanised sector. Recent trends however show that due to unsuitable fishing methods, the catches have declined and resulted in extensive damage to the ecosystem. As small scale fisheries are community based, adoption of management of fisheries in India represents a significant milestone towards management and improving stocks of fishes. WWF's Community- based Certification programme can help small scale fisheries through the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certification process. This programme has grown and includes over 15 projects world wide and with WWF's global network of organisations and its partnership with local NGO's, the Community Fisheries Programme is well equipped to facilitate MSC certification of small scale fisheries in both developed and developing countries. This has shown great success in a few short years. What is MSC Certification Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) is a non-profit organisation established to promote sustainable fisheries and responsible fishing practices worldwide. MSC has developed a logo that informs consumers that when they buy seafood products with a MSC logo, they are supporting healthier oceans and a healthier environment. Only fisheries certified to be sustainable would be using the MSC logo. It indicates that MSC gives thrust towards sustainable marine fisheries by promoting responsible environmentally sound, socially The Rare Red India, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar and Laos PDR. beneficial and economically viable fisheries practices while maintaining the biodiversity, productivity and ecological process of the marine environment. Both the end customer and the fishing industry gain through this certification. The benefits of MSC certification to all concerned is listed below • Fishing industry: Recognition of good and heightened management of fisheries, preferred supplier status, newer markets • Retailers and wholesalers: Commitment to sustainability, confidence in sustainability of product, meeting consumer demand • Consumers: Not contributing towards overfishing and ecosystem degradation and supporting the management efforts MSC Certification process The Marine Stewardship Council promotes equal access to its certification programme regardless of the scale of fishery operation. All types of fisheries are eligible to participate and be assessed against the MSC Standard - the Principles and Criteria for Sustainable Fishing. There are situations in which a fishery may have insufficient data to show that it meets the MSC Standard. To ensure that these fisheries can participate in the MSC programme, MSC has been developing methodological guidance to assist certifiers involved in assessing such fisheries. The new guidelines introduce a risk assessment that can be initiated if fisheries lack full and complete scientific data for key environmental indicators needed to assess performance.MSC's conventional methodology draws on scientific data to produce sound and WWF-India, Species Division PROJECTS UPDATES 15 Sustainable Fisheries For A Healthy Marine Ecosystem A reddish brown, bushytailed mammal, the size of a cat, red panda has long white whiskers and patches of white over its eyes and cheeks. A red panda has a beautiful long ringed tail, which it uses as a warparound blanket in winters. Sluggish on the ground, red panda is an expert climber of trees and spends most of its life on them. They love to eat bamboo and use their strong tongues to strip tender green leaves off the bamboo stem.Their digestive system cannot take in bamboo well and they have to eat large amounts of it every day to survive. They also eat grass, roots, nuts, berries and lichen. They even eat insects, bird's eggs and chicks. Known to be solitary, the only time two pandas are spotted together is during the mating season. Each WWF team finally gets lucky and spots the extremely elusive red panda in snow clad mountains off Sikkim. year in June or July, female red pandas give birth to one to four babies, called cubs. Red panda babies are born with their eyes closed and are tiny and weigh only In the forests of the North-Eastern Indian state of Sikkim, a team of about 200g. Cubs are usually born in a hole of an old tree, which the researchers had been battling hostile terrain, storms and incessant mother lines with leaves and sticks. Old growth forests are thus very rains for four years just to find the vulnerable red panda (Ailurus important for the survival of red pandas, as they provide dens and fulgens). An animal which had successfully evaded our team for hiding places for both cubs and their parents. For the first four months, years. cubs depend on their mother for milk. And later mother and her cubs move from tree to tree and look for food together. On the morning of 3rd January, Mr. Basant Sharma from WWF spotted a red panda in Pangolakha Wildlife Sanctuary. While the team Protected in India under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, red pandas are was still coming to terms with this sighting, two more red pandas were today fighting a lonely battle for survival. Severely threatened, they spotted on 4th and 14th January raising the teams happiness are losing their home as forests are readily being destroyed to collect quotient. timber, fuel or converted in to agricultural land. Today tourists and Discovered in 1825, 50 years before the giant panda, the red panda is unfairly known as the lesser panda. It has many other names- fire fox, fire cat and cat bear. Earlier thought to be of the bear family and a distant cousin of the giant panda, recent research has finally traced its roots to raccoons. The red panda lives in temperate forests of China, domestic cattle have raided their homes. Their only source of food (bamboo) is also cut down. They are also poached for their fur and are victims of the cruel pet trade. (Since January this year, five red pandas have been sighted, all in Pangolakha Wildlife Sanctuary, Sikkim.) PROJECTS UPDATES WWF recognised red panda as a priority species and initiated a project in 2005 to conserve them in the Khangchendzonga Landscape India and subsequently initiated work in the Western Arunachal Landscape in 2008. Along with the state forest departments, other government agencies, NGOs and CBOS, scientific institutions and communities, WWF is working in the Eastern Himalaya for long-term conservation of red panda. The idea is to create a potential distribution map of red panda using the GIS domain and then carrying out ground truthing to check existing situation in these areas. Threats, if any, will be identified and a participatory mitigation strategy will be put in place. 12 MSC workshop in progress Protection of our forests is an "The launch of GFTN-India represents essential step towards a clear move in this direction and, with ensuring that our biodiversity the support of industry both nationally and ecosystems continue to and across the globe, we can make a retain their grandeur and real difference in protecting the world's beauty. Forests play a vital forests and the people and species that role in harbouring more than depend upon them.” 45,000 floral and 81,000 faunal species of which 5,150 Mr Ravi Singh, Secretary General and floral and 1,837 faunal CEO, WWF-India. species are endemic. The recorded forest area in the country is 76.5 million ha. The “State of Forest Report 2005” published by the Forest Survey of India in 2008 shows that the extent of forest cover in the country is estimated to be 67.71 million ha (20.60% of total geographical area). India's annual rate of deforestation was 1.3 million hectares during 1970s but this has changed considerably since 1990 as a result of changes in national policies and programmes, including the afforestation and social forestry programmes in the country. Presently, India is one of the few countries with a net addition in the forest cover. About 90% of the forests in India, are under government ownership. India is a key player in global forest trade. It is estimated that the demand for timber is likely to grow faster vis-a-vis the supply. In other words, the nation will have to meet the gap through imports. The contribution of natural forests in timber production process will continue to decline (Ganguly, 2000; ITTO, 2004). Plantation forestry and farm forestry/agro forestry will become main sources of domestic supply of timber. increased from INR 61 million in 1975-76 to more than INR 6000 million in 2007-08. The major export markets are USA, UK, Germany, Netherlands, Japan, Italy, France, Canada, Australia, Saudi Arabia and Switzerland. As these countries favour products from certified forests and due to absence of certified forest areas in India, exporters have no option but to import wood from certified forests elsewhere. However, the desired species of wood (example, Sessam or Acacia nilotica) may not be available for importing to India. The Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India has constituted a committee on forest certification and develop a national forest certification system. The Global Forest and Trade Network (GFTN) can help address these challenges with the help of innovative tools and methods, including a “step wise approach” to credible forest certification. WWF's Global Forest & Trade Network (GFTN) was founded in 1991 when a small but visionary group of companies in the United Kingdom first committed themselves to purchasing their wood products from wellGFTN's launch in India managed forests. These companies came together as The Launch of WWF's Global Forest & Trade Network (GFTN) in the first WWF Buyer Group and India on 3rd of December 2008- was welcomed by the industry as by the end of the decade there this was a long awaited initiative. were similar groups across Europe and in the U.S, Japan, Amongst the Indian companies that have already registered include and Brazil. Membership grew - Asha Handicrafts Association (Mumbai), Manglam Arts (Jaipur), rapidly and included some of TEDDY Exports (Madurai) and ITC Ltd (Andhra Pradesh) - who the biggest names in the global supply timber, wood products, and paper to Europe, US and other forest products industry. major nations have applied to become the first Indian participants in this internationally renowned trade network. WWF-India will work Core elements of GFTN closely with Government of India to promote sustainable process: management of forests in line with GFTN goals and aims to promote • Reduce and remove illegal the practices to achieve this goal of responsible forestry and sources of wood from the promotion of credible forest certification in India. value chain Speaking at the launch, Mr Richard McLellan, Head of GFTN, WWF International, said: “The new GFTN-India is an opportunity to protect India's economy and its forests. We welcome the chance to encourage forest certification and responsible forestry, and we are looking forward to working with the Indian government and with industry to develop credible certification for India's forests.” Dr. Kirit S Parikh, Member of the Planning Commission in his key note address said, “GFTN is important in the context of Indian Forestry. GFTN can serve as a programme in which we can do forestry in a commercial and sustainable way. • • The United Nations reported in 2001 that more than half of the demand for certified forest products in the 1990s was generated by GFTN member companies. Today, certification is widely recognized as a useful tool in the achievement of responsible forest management and is expanding rapidly. • Support for changes in legislation and law enforcement to aid responsible forest management and improve competitiveness • Access to affordable, long-term financing (subject to local availability) Timber Manufacturers & Processors • • • • GFTN in India GFTN-India reflects India's commitment towards sustainable forest management and minimizing the nation's forest footprint. People who can participate in GFTN include all who are associated with timber trade and manufacturing and distribution of wood products At a macro level the Global Forest & Trade Network (GFTN) offers a wealth of benefits to forest-related businesses representing all parts of the supply chain. Forest and Plantation Managers For this segment participation in GFTN can • Strengthen their competitive advantage by providing on-site technical support throughout the process : • Add new and strengthened links to markets • Improve relations with NGOs, local forest users, and others ; • Have higher rates of efficiency in forest management and environmental performance • Provide tools and frameworks for better risk management • Information and assurance to investors, employees, regulators, and others • Improved levels of legal compliance • • Access to dependable sources of responsibly grown and harvested timber that is credibly certified Assistance with procurement and purchasing policies On-site technical assistance throughout the process leading to independent and credible certification Improved ability to communicate with environmentally conscious consumers Better understanding of retail markets How GFTN Benefits Retailers, Distributors and End Users The reputation and profitability of retailers, distributors, and other end users gets enhanced if they are being viewed as environmentally sustainable. For them, joining the Global Forest & Trade Network gives the confidence to customers who increasingly demand to know the source of wood products and their sustainability; provide linkages to new, dependable, and credibly certified producers and suppliers. E.C. (European Commission Switch Asia Programme) and WWFIndia together are implementing a project "Sustainable and responsible trade promoted to wood processing SME's in China, Vietnam and India. In India the project focuses on three states namely Rajasthan, Kerala and Uttar Pradesh. Improve efficiency and sustainability of production Support credible certification systems that create value for producers Encourage market demand and support for “better” wood supplies ( via credible chain of custody schemes) Forest owner, timber processor, distributor and retailer participants of the GFTN come from over 30 different countries and vary between small, community based operations to Fortune 500 global multinational companies, giving the GFTN unparalleled reach and scope in helping to build responsible forest management. Presently, GFTN's 360 participants generate annual forest products sales exceeding $61 billion per year, accounting for 16 per cent of the world trade in forest products. Besides PROJECTS UPDATES Forest certification in India is in its early stages. Presently no forests in India are certified. Only (New Ambadi Plantations) in South India have recently secured FSC Forest Management Unit certificate. A few small and medium companies have secured a chain of custody certificates in order to meet the export demand. Wooden handicrafts industry in India is facing market access problems due to the lack of forest certification. This industry is one of the largest producers of carved wood products in the world. The export of wooden handicrafts has • providing global employment to over 1.3 million people, participants also buy or sell in excess of 248 million cubic metres of forest products per year. Within the certified market, GFTN participants trade 25 percent of certified products and 80 per cent of FSC certified products. Additionally, GFTN participants manage more than 23 million ha of FSC certified forests. Jetender Rawat PROJECTS UPDATES 13 Global Forestry and Trade Network (GFTN)Towards Protecting Our Forest Wealth 14 GFTN inauguration -L-R- Ravi Singh (SG& CEO- WWF-India) Richard McLellan-Head of GFTN/ WWF-International Richard Donkers (Minister Counsellor Delegation of the European Commission) & Dr. Kirit S. Parikh - Member Planning Commission Rajaji National Park Protection of our forests is an "The launch of GFTN-India represents essential step towards a clear move in this direction and, with ensuring that our biodiversity the support of industry both nationally and ecosystems continue to and across the globe, we can make a retain their grandeur and real difference in protecting the world's beauty. Forests play a vital forests and the people and species that role in harbouring more than depend upon them.” 45,000 floral and 81,000 faunal species of which 5,150 Mr Ravi Singh, Secretary General and floral and 1,837 faunal CEO, WWF-India. species are endemic. The recorded forest area in the country is 76.5 million ha. The “State of Forest Report 2005” published by the Forest Survey of India in 2008 shows that the extent of forest cover in the country is estimated to be 67.71 million ha (20.60% of total geographical area). India's annual rate of deforestation was 1.3 million hectares during 1970s but this has changed considerably since 1990 as a result of changes in national policies and programmes, including the afforestation and social forestry programmes in the country. Presently, India is one of the few countries with a net addition in the forest cover. About 90% of the forests in India, are under government ownership. India is a key player in global forest trade. It is estimated that the demand for timber is likely to grow faster vis-a-vis the supply. In other words, the nation will have to meet the gap through imports. The contribution of natural forests in timber production process will continue to decline (Ganguly, 2000; ITTO, 2004). Plantation forestry and farm forestry/agro forestry will become main sources of domestic supply of timber. increased from INR 61 million in 1975-76 to more than INR 6000 million in 2007-08. The major export markets are USA, UK, Germany, Netherlands, Japan, Italy, France, Canada, Australia, Saudi Arabia and Switzerland. As these countries favour products from certified forests and due to absence of certified forest areas in India, exporters have no option but to import wood from certified forests elsewhere. However, the desired species of wood (example, Sessam or Acacia nilotica) may not be available for importing to India. The Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India has constituted a committee on forest certification and develop a national forest certification system. The Global Forest and Trade Network (GFTN) can help address these challenges with the help of innovative tools and methods, including a “step wise approach” to credible forest certification. WWF's Global Forest & Trade Network (GFTN) was founded in 1991 when a small but visionary group of companies in the United Kingdom first committed themselves to purchasing their wood products from wellGFTN's launch in India managed forests. These companies came together as The Launch of WWF's Global Forest & Trade Network (GFTN) in the first WWF Buyer Group and India on 3rd of December 2008- was welcomed by the industry as by the end of the decade there this was a long awaited initiative. were similar groups across Europe and in the U.S, Japan, Amongst the Indian companies that have already registered include and Brazil. Membership grew - Asha Handicrafts Association (Mumbai), Manglam Arts (Jaipur), rapidly and included some of TEDDY Exports (Madurai) and ITC Ltd (Andhra Pradesh) - who the biggest names in the global supply timber, wood products, and paper to Europe, US and other forest products industry. major nations have applied to become the first Indian participants in this internationally renowned trade network. WWF-India will work Core elements of GFTN closely with Government of India to promote sustainable process: management of forests in line with GFTN goals and aims to promote • Reduce and remove illegal the practices to achieve this goal of responsible forestry and sources of wood from the promotion of credible forest certification in India. value chain Speaking at the launch, Mr Richard McLellan, Head of GFTN, WWF International, said: “The new GFTN-India is an opportunity to protect India's economy and its forests. We welcome the chance to encourage forest certification and responsible forestry, and we are looking forward to working with the Indian government and with industry to develop credible certification for India's forests.” Dr. Kirit S Parikh, Member of the Planning Commission in his key note address said, “GFTN is important in the context of Indian Forestry. GFTN can serve as a programme in which we can do forestry in a commercial and sustainable way. • • The United Nations reported in 2001 that more than half of the demand for certified forest products in the 1990s was generated by GFTN member companies. Today, certification is widely recognized as a useful tool in the achievement of responsible forest management and is expanding rapidly. • Support for changes in legislation and law enforcement to aid responsible forest management and improve competitiveness • Access to affordable, long-term financing (subject to local availability) Timber Manufacturers & Processors • • • • GFTN in India GFTN-India reflects India's commitment towards sustainable forest management and minimizing the nation's forest footprint. People who can participate in GFTN include all who are associated with timber trade and manufacturing and distribution of wood products At a macro level the Global Forest & Trade Network (GFTN) offers a wealth of benefits to forest-related businesses representing all parts of the supply chain. Forest and Plantation Managers For this segment participation in GFTN can • Strengthen their competitive advantage by providing on-site technical support throughout the process : • Add new and strengthened links to markets • Improve relations with NGOs, local forest users, and others ; • Have higher rates of efficiency in forest management and environmental performance • Provide tools and frameworks for better risk management • Information and assurance to investors, employees, regulators, and others • Improved levels of legal compliance • • Access to dependable sources of responsibly grown and harvested timber that is credibly certified Assistance with procurement and purchasing policies On-site technical assistance throughout the process leading to independent and credible certification Improved ability to communicate with environmentally conscious consumers Better understanding of retail markets How GFTN Benefits Retailers, Distributors and End Users The reputation and profitability of retailers, distributors, and other end users gets enhanced if they are being viewed as environmentally sustainable. For them, joining the Global Forest & Trade Network gives the confidence to customers who increasingly demand to know the source of wood products and their sustainability; provide linkages to new, dependable, and credibly certified producers and suppliers. E.C. (European Commission Switch Asia Programme) and WWFIndia together are implementing a project "Sustainable and responsible trade promoted to wood processing SME's in China, Vietnam and India. In India the project focuses on three states namely Rajasthan, Kerala and Uttar Pradesh. Improve efficiency and sustainability of production Support credible certification systems that create value for producers Encourage market demand and support for “better” wood supplies ( via credible chain of custody schemes) Forest owner, timber processor, distributor and retailer participants of the GFTN come from over 30 different countries and vary between small, community based operations to Fortune 500 global multinational companies, giving the GFTN unparalleled reach and scope in helping to build responsible forest management. Presently, GFTN's 360 participants generate annual forest products sales exceeding $61 billion per year, accounting for 16 per cent of the world trade in forest products. Besides PROJECTS UPDATES Forest certification in India is in its early stages. Presently no forests in India are certified. Only (New Ambadi Plantations) in South India have recently secured FSC Forest Management Unit certificate. A few small and medium companies have secured a chain of custody certificates in order to meet the export demand. Wooden handicrafts industry in India is facing market access problems due to the lack of forest certification. This industry is one of the largest producers of carved wood products in the world. The export of wooden handicrafts has • providing global employment to over 1.3 million people, participants also buy or sell in excess of 248 million cubic metres of forest products per year. Within the certified market, GFTN participants trade 25 percent of certified products and 80 per cent of FSC certified products. Additionally, GFTN participants manage more than 23 million ha of FSC certified forests. Jetender Rawat PROJECTS UPDATES 13 Global Forestry and Trade Network (GFTN)Towards Protecting Our Forest Wealth 14 GFTN inauguration -L-R- Ravi Singh (SG& CEO- WWF-India) Richard McLellan-Head of GFTN/ WWF-International Richard Donkers (Minister Counsellor Delegation of the European Commission) & Dr. Kirit S. Parikh - Member Planning Commission Rajaji National Park India with a coast line of 8055 kms, supports millions of people in the fishery sector and contributes significantly to the national and state GDP. However marine fisheries production has reached a plateau and only marginal increase can be predicted in future. Nearly 85% of fisheries in India are contributed by the small scale sector. Historically small scale sector fisheries has been stable vis-avis mechanised sector. Recent trends however show that due to unsuitable fishing methods, the catches have declined and resulted in extensive damage to the ecosystem. As small scale fisheries are community based, adoption of management of fisheries in India represents a significant milestone towards management and improving stocks of fishes. WWF's Community- based Certification programme can help small scale fisheries through the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certification process. This programme has grown and includes over 15 projects world wide and with WWF's global network of organisations and its partnership with local NGO's, the Community Fisheries Programme is well equipped to facilitate MSC certification of small scale fisheries in both developed and developing countries. This has shown great success in a few short years. What is MSC Certification Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) is a non-profit organisation established to promote sustainable fisheries and responsible fishing practices worldwide. MSC has developed a logo that informs consumers that when they buy seafood products with a MSC logo, they are supporting healthier oceans and a healthier environment. Only fisheries certified to be sustainable would be using the MSC logo. It indicates that MSC gives thrust towards sustainable marine fisheries by promoting responsible environmentally sound, socially The Rare Red India, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar and Laos PDR. beneficial and economically viable fisheries practices while maintaining the biodiversity, productivity and ecological process of the marine environment. Both the end customer and the fishing industry gain through this certification. The benefits of MSC certification to all concerned is listed below • Fishing industry: Recognition of good and heightened management of fisheries, preferred supplier status, newer markets • Retailers and wholesalers: Commitment to sustainability, confidence in sustainability of product, meeting consumer demand • Consumers: Not contributing towards overfishing and ecosystem degradation and supporting the management efforts MSC Certification process The Marine Stewardship Council promotes equal access to its certification programme regardless of the scale of fishery operation. All types of fisheries are eligible to participate and be assessed against the MSC Standard - the Principles and Criteria for Sustainable Fishing. There are situations in which a fishery may have insufficient data to show that it meets the MSC Standard. To ensure that these fisheries can participate in the MSC programme, MSC has been developing methodological guidance to assist certifiers involved in assessing such fisheries. The new guidelines introduce a risk assessment that can be initiated if fisheries lack full and complete scientific data for key environmental indicators needed to assess performance.MSC's conventional methodology draws on scientific data to produce sound and WWF-India, Species Division PROJECTS UPDATES 15 Sustainable Fisheries For A Healthy Marine Ecosystem A reddish brown, bushytailed mammal, the size of a cat, red panda has long white whiskers and patches of white over its eyes and cheeks. A red panda has a beautiful long ringed tail, which it uses as a warparound blanket in winters. Sluggish on the ground, red panda is an expert climber of trees and spends most of its life on them. They love to eat bamboo and use their strong tongues to strip tender green leaves off the bamboo stem.Their digestive system cannot take in bamboo well and they have to eat large amounts of it every day to survive. They also eat grass, roots, nuts, berries and lichen. They even eat insects, bird's eggs and chicks. Known to be solitary, the only time two pandas are spotted together is during the mating season. Each WWF team finally gets lucky and spots the extremely elusive red panda in snow clad mountains off Sikkim. year in June or July, female red pandas give birth to one to four babies, called cubs. Red panda babies are born with their eyes closed and are tiny and weigh only In the forests of the North-Eastern Indian state of Sikkim, a team of about 200g. Cubs are usually born in a hole of an old tree, which the researchers had been battling hostile terrain, storms and incessant mother lines with leaves and sticks. Old growth forests are thus very rains for four years just to find the vulnerable red panda (Ailurus important for the survival of red pandas, as they provide dens and fulgens). An animal which had successfully evaded our team for hiding places for both cubs and their parents. For the first four months, years. cubs depend on their mother for milk. And later mother and her cubs move from tree to tree and look for food together. On the morning of 3rd January, Mr. Basant Sharma from WWF spotted a red panda in Pangolakha Wildlife Sanctuary. While the team Protected in India under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, red pandas are was still coming to terms with this sighting, two more red pandas were today fighting a lonely battle for survival. Severely threatened, they spotted on 4th and 14th January raising the teams happiness are losing their home as forests are readily being destroyed to collect quotient. timber, fuel or converted in to agricultural land. Today tourists and Discovered in 1825, 50 years before the giant panda, the red panda is unfairly known as the lesser panda. It has many other names- fire fox, fire cat and cat bear. Earlier thought to be of the bear family and a distant cousin of the giant panda, recent research has finally traced its roots to raccoons. The red panda lives in temperate forests of China, domestic cattle have raided their homes. Their only source of food (bamboo) is also cut down. They are also poached for their fur and are victims of the cruel pet trade. (Since January this year, five red pandas have been sighted, all in Pangolakha Wildlife Sanctuary, Sikkim.) PROJECTS UPDATES WWF recognised red panda as a priority species and initiated a project in 2005 to conserve them in the Khangchendzonga Landscape India and subsequently initiated work in the Western Arunachal Landscape in 2008. Along with the state forest departments, other government agencies, NGOs and CBOS, scientific institutions and communities, WWF is working in the Eastern Himalaya for long-term conservation of red panda. The idea is to create a potential distribution map of red panda using the GIS domain and then carrying out ground truthing to check existing situation in these areas. Threats, if any, will be identified and a participatory mitigation strategy will be put in place. 12 MSC workshop in progress Explaining the innovative technique, Professor Ura from the University of Tokyo said, "Precise underwater movements and sonar-range of dolphins can be observed even in shallow water with a six - hydrophone system. An acoustic data logger system has also been demonstrated that can count the number of dolphins." The umbrella array deployed in Ganges at Karnabas since November 2008 has yielded useful data. The findings have opened a window to the Gangetic Dolphin behavior which until now was an underwater mystery. The dolphin data from the array deployed in November 2008 at Karnabas has given clues to parental behavior of these blind dolphins. Dolphins maintain a nursery where they leave their calves in secure pools of water and come there regularly to feed and take care of them. A paper titled “Long-term Real-time monitoring of the Ganges River Dolphins using Integrated Observation System using Multiple acoustic arrays” has been recently presented at Sixth International symposium on Underwater Technology '09 held at Wuxi, China. objective fishery assessments against the MSC standard. Many small fisheries, such as those taking part in the trial, are not in a position to provide comprehensive data sets. The aim of the new approach is to provide small-scale and datadeficient fisheries with an alternative route to certification against the MSC's standard, while maintaining the scientific rigour that characterises the MSC programme. The analysis of the data obtained since November 2008 till February 2009 was also done and the presence of dolphins at a particular time, distance and direction was believed to come up with some diurnal trends. The same equipment is also used to assess and confirm dolphin number at Karnabas and also for smaller stretches of river The thrust now is to elucidate further knowledge about the parental behavior and maintenance of nursery by these dolphins. At the same time we hope to get more information on behavior patterns. International MSC team in conversation with local fishermen In May 2007, the MSC Technical Advisory Board approved the draft methodological guidance for use in a number of trial fisheries assessments which will be conducted by third party certifiers. The aim of the trials is to allow for practical testing, reviewing and evaluation of the guidance methodology to ensure its effectiveness. The findings will help sharpen and increase the scope of WWFIndia's River Dolphin programme. WWF-India's work, in partnership with local community members in Narora has shown encouraging results as the pressure on the river system and the dolphin population has reduced. Our work has also resulted in improved living conditions of villagers thus strengthening the link between conservation and livelihoods. Fisheries from Africa, Latin America, Asia and Europe are involved in these trial assessments. Pre-analysis of community- based fisheries in India WWF-India began the “Pre-analysis of community based and other fisheries in India for certification (Ecolabelling)” project to set up a concept of sustainable fisheries in every corner of the country. On the matrix of labeling eco-friendly fishery and fishery practice, a survey was conducted during November 2003 to April 2004 to identify ecologically sustainable fishing practice in the coastal zones of West Bengal, Kerala, Gujarat and Tamil Nadu. The objective of the project was to identify community-based fisheries from the different states of India that are ecologically sustainable with respect to their catch, culture, crafts and gears, community participation, and environment. Through the pre-analysis process, the CommunityBased Certification (CBC) methodology was effectively and efficiently tested over a large area for identifying the most promising candidates for certification in the region. The pre-analysis project report recommended moving forward with pre-assessments with the oil sardine (Sardinella longiceps) fishery and a squid (Doryteuthis sibogae) fishery, both located in Kerala. Gangetic River Dolphin. WWF-India and Fishermen Welfare Society (FWS) A one day workshop was held in Kochi in to create an awareness of MSC certification among the coastal fishers, NGO's, Government organisatons, exporters and all other organisations involved in the development of fisheries in Kerala. In taking the MSC certification forward, Fishermen Welfare Society (FWS) Kollam evinced great interest and hence WWF-India identified them as co-clients in taking forward the process of MSC certification. The objective of such societies is to develop institutional mechanisms required to enhance income of small scale fishermen from fishing activities.. About 1000 fishermen are members of this body, and is organised through 5 primary societies in five villages of Kollam coast. The FWS organised NGO interventions in fish marketing and the first fish marketing centre was established in the village of Pallithottam in the early eighties. The “Pallithottam Model” spread to the adjoining villages. Pallithottam Thankassery belt in Kollam district was identified as the unit for certification. The oil sardine fishery of Kerala by the gill netters along the Thankassery Pallithottam region of Kollam coast will be assessed against the MSC guidelines.This pilot assessment will be taking place in parallel with a 'conventional' assessment and separate notifications will be provided in relation to the 'conventional' MSC assessment. MSC Certification field visit MSC Certification team comprising of Dr. Jim Andrews, Lead assessor, Moody Marines, UK, Ms. Anna Battesse, MSC, UK, Dr. Appukuttan, Expert Assessor, India, Ms. Alison Cross, WWF-US and Vinod Malayilethu, WWF-India ,visited the area of certification as part of the assessment field visit and held a series of interactions with the fishery managers from state fisheries department, Fishery scientists from various fisheries institutes like Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute, Kochi, Central Institute of Fisheries Technology, Kochi for getting an insight into the status of oil sardine as well as squid fishery in Kerala. The assessment team held a stakeholders workshop at Kollam for understanding the community perceptions on the oil sardine fishery in the certification area. Details discussions were held with the fishermen community leaders and the fishers of the Fishermen Welfare Society, Kollam, the co-clients in the certification programme. It is hoped that this role model in MSC program would encourage more participation from other fishing communities hence promoting sustainable fisheries. Vinod Malayilethu PROJECTS UPDATES Monitoring of Dolphins through hydrophone systems. Pre-assessment of community based fisheries in Kerala WWF-India moved to the second phase of this work with a preassessment of community based fisheries in Kerala. As a first step of the pre-assessment work, a survey was carried out in July August 2007 along nine coastal districts of Kerala namely Thiruvananthapuram, Kollam, Allapuzha, Ernakulam, Thrissur, Kozhikode, Malappuram, Kannur and Kasargode to reaffirm the status of the candidate fishery and the interest of the fishers in the certification programme, as certification would not be successful without community support. It was observed during the preassessment survey in the coastal districts of Kerala that oil sardine played a vital role in the daily diet of the fishing community and contributes to about 15% of the total marine fish production in India. Marine Programme, WWF-India. WWF-India has been actively working for conservation of this highly endangered dolphin since 1996 which is threatened due to anthropogenic pressures and human intervention. In 2006, WWFIndia initiated a partnership between IIT Delhi and University of Tokyo to further develop insight into behaviour and mating patterns of the mammal. Various important points regarding the inter-click interval and the acoustic processing time in the dolphin brain have been discovered using the array system. As an extension of data analysis, we have confirmed that dolphins sense an average 20 m distance using its sonar system by sending clicks and gathering information by reflected clicks. In the forthcoming months, the umbrella array will be deployed at the same location for another four months to understand more behavior patterns and Inter click interval details. During February '2009 trials, this array was shifted near the calf pool for a week to decrease the distance from the supposed pool and get more streamlined information. Sandeep Behera, WWF-India WWF-India's ongoing partnership with University of Tokyo, Institute of Industrial Science and Indian Institute of Technology(IIT), Delhi have proven to be effective in understanding the behaviour of the blind Ganges River Dolphin (Platanista gangetica). WWF-Canon / François Xavier PELLETIER PROJECTS UPDATES 11 WWF-India, Saving River Dolphins From Extinction 16 GORSHING GANGK Snout of GORSHING GANGK An awareness drive amongst the local communities was also conducted along the river bank to ensure community participation prior to reintroduction of these species into the Ganga.This drive covered the area below the Sandeep Behera 2. 3. Sandeep Behera The target reintroduction area was very well suited for the release. The site was selected after a survey was conducted by the state forest department officials and WWF-India. The area has been inhabited by wild Gharials in fairly recent times. A female Gharial (3.63 m) inhabited this area as late as 1994. Another Gharial was rescued here in 2006-07 and released into the Ganga at a spot further up stream near Bijnor. Also, easily recognizable features of Gharial habitat like perennial stream with deep pools, undisturbed mid-river sand bars, high and steep sand banks for nesting, and multistream braided channels with stagnant eddy counter-currents occur in this stretch of the river. 1. 1. Shri A.K. Divadi (Chief Conservator of Forest-Meerut) and Dr. Parikshit Gautam (Director Freshwater & Wetlands, WWF-India) 2 & 3. Gharial being released A total of 131 Gharials were released in a phased manner. These Gharials were bred at the Kukrail Gharial Rehabilitation Centre at Lucknow and belonged to the 2005-2006 batches. They were in the age group of 2-3.8 years.In the first phase 60 Gharials were released in which there were 18 males and 42 females.They measured approximately 1.20-1.68 m in length and weighed approximately 7-12 kg. In the second phase 71 Gharials were released of which there were 19 males and 52 females. These weighed 7-16 kg and measured approximately 1.20-1.80 m in length. Intensive post-release monitoring is underway and it has been observed that these individuals had already negotiated upto 10 kilometer within the first few days downstream and 2.5 km upstream of the release site. These release programmes will be sustained for a number of years until a resident breeding population of Gharial is established at a favourable location in the river. The objectives of the reintroduction will be achieved through people's participation and regular monitoring of sections of the Ganga River and studying the response of the released Gharial in terms of ability to permanently adapt to the environment. Rescue operations for Gharial individuals will also be done, which could drift downstream of protected areas. The local communities have expressed support and solidarity for ensuring the return of the Gharial in this area. With the success of this project it is hoped that these species sees a revival PROJECTS UPDATES - Pema Wange, Lohit Gogoi, Pijush Kumar Dutta and Rakesh Soud The status of the crocodilian species Gharial,Gavialis gangeticus, has recently been revised by the IUCN to Critically Endangered. The surviving population is spread in less than half a dozen riverine habitats e.g.-Ken, Son, Mahanadi, Chambal, Girwa and Ramganga. Estimates indicate that about 1400 survive in the wild. In order to address the conservation needs of this species, it is necessary to locate viable alternative habitats which supplement the extremely few habitats where the species currently occur. projects Sandeep Behera The glaciers of this area act as a water source for most of the high altitude wetlands found in the area. The glaciers and all the lakes of this area are also the main source of water for two most important rivers of Tawang and West Kameng districts the Kameng river and the Tawangchu river. The Tawangchu River flows through Bhutan and enters India as Manas and the Kameng River flows through Assam as the Bhorali River and both these rivers are among the major tributaries of the Brahmaputra River. Thus any disturbance in these glaciers is likely to have an impact on lives of millions of people from Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and also Bhutan who are settled here and are dependent on the catchments areas of these rivers. Pijush Kumar Dutta So far no scientific information regarding the impact of Climate Change on this glacier is available. However, according to Mr. Pasang from Thembang village, one of the Yak and Sheep herders, who has been visiting this area since last 20 years for summer grazing and was present with the team, informed that since last five years this glacier has moved up from one of the lakes, Khampa Tso , which is located nearly 1.5 km south of the glacier snout. According to him this glacier is the source of water for the lake and as the lake water appears like white milk, they call it Khampa Tso. However, during this visit many water bodies in the form of lakes were found in between the snout of the Glacier and Khampa Tso which according to him are new and don't have any name for them and this means that this glacier has receded nearly 1.5 km in last five years. This needs proper scientific investigation through satellite based studies to document the impact of climate change on this and other glaciers of the area. According to the local information, there are many such Gangk (glacier) in this area some of which areGangri Gangk and Sangya Phu Gangk, located in the north eastern direction and north of this Gorshing Gangk. Pijush Kumar Dutta, WAL Office - WWF-India WWF-India WAL team with villagers from Thembang during the second baseline survey of Thembang Bapu Community Conserved Area, were able to reach the snout of one of the Glaciers which locally the villagers call GORSHING GANGK (in Monpa dialect Gangk means Glacier). The team led by Mr. Pema Wange and Lohit Gogoi along with village elders were able to reach the snout of the glacier after trekking for 5 days from Thembang village. Hastinapur Wildlife Sanctuary, the Ganga river and its environs downstream to the Ganga Irrigation Barrage at Narora which has been declared as a Ramsar site with its own conservation implications.The area is currently the focus of dolphin conservation programme of WWF-India which will definitely benefit Gharial conservation, monitoring and protection. January 29th and 12th February 2009 can be marked on WWF-India's calendar as historical. In a task that was no less than being termed as herculean, WWF-India along with the UP State Forest Department reintroduced the endangered Gharial into river Ganga at the Hastinapur Wildlife Sanctuary (HWLS), U.P. Glaciers in the Indian Himalayas are a major source of water for three large river systems of India-Indus,Ganga and Brahmaputra. The Brahmaputra basin has 662 glaciers, which is only 12% of total number of glaciers recorded from the three river basins. However, most of the glaciers of the Brahmaputra River basin present in Arunachal Pradesh are still unexplored with very little information on the impact of Climate Change on these glaciers . Pijush Kumar Dutta PROJECTS UPDATES 17 WWF-India Reintroduces Gharials Into River Ganges Visit To Gorshing Glacier of Western Arunachal Pradesh 10 Though, the northern geographic limit of the Nilgiri tahr is Nilgiris (the southern limit being Tiruvannamalai), the species was known to occur in Agumbe Ghats in Karnataka (about 200 km north of its present range) even a few decades ago (Davidar 1978). Nilgiri tahr inhabits montane grasslands at elevations of 1200 to 2600 m above mean sea level but have been observed to exist in elevation starting from 500m. The preferred habitat is grasslands with rocky cliffs. The present range is restricted along a narrow stretch of 400 km between Nilgiri Hills in the north and Ashambu Hills in the South (11°30' N - 8°20'N). Reportedly, the estimated number of Nilgiri tahr is about 2200 - 2500 individuals (Forest deportment census reports 2008) in the wild. Nilgiri tahr is a social animal found in mixed herds composed of adult females and their young. Old males associate in larger mixed herds during the breeding season, but are often solitary or in small all male groups. Female herds inhabit particular home ranges, adult males will move between these groups. There is significant dimorphism between adult male and female (Rice, 1990; Prater, 1971). The main breeding season (rut) is during the monsoon period and young may be present throughout the year. The gestation period is about 6 months. It is mostly preyed by leopard and wild dog. The species is listed in Schedule I of the Indian Wildlife (Protection) Act 1972 which gives it a special protection status. It is also categorized as an Endangered species (IUCN 2006). The reasons for the decline of tahr populations have not been fully understood. Despite several studies over the years, what we have is only rough estimations of Nilgiri tahr populations. The species have always been under severe stress on account of the construction of numerous hydroelectric projects, timber felling and planting monocultures of Eucalyptus and wattles. All these development activities, especially the plantation activities affect the heart of the tahr habitat, which are the grasslands-sholas. In this background, it becomes an urgent necessity that a comprehensive study is initiated in the hills of Tamil Nadu and Kerala to understand the present population and ecological requirements of Nilgiri tahr. Initial activities towards this included the following: • Working out possible locations of Nilgiri tahr using a digital elevation model. This revealed that greater attention needed to be paid to cliff areas; • Using these new criteria surveys were initiated in the Mukurthi National Park which is the northern most habitat of the Nilgiri tahr. Searching individual cliffs yielded very good sighting compared to earlier work. Now a rapid estimation of locations on the ground is being carried out; • Information has been collected on the population structure,behaviour, habitat use, food habits and distribution of this population. Along with this, impacts of human activities including t o u r i s m , i s a l s o b e i n g assessed. Further surveys on other populations are to be carried out in the coming months; • Since the ultimate aim of the programme is to develop and implement a coordinated conservation strategy for the long-term survival of the Nilgiri tahr, WWF is facilitating the formation of an alliance for the conservation of the species. The first meeting t o w a r d s this was held in Coimbatore and a number of groups present, signed a common charter towards this. This will be followed by further work towards the formalization and ratification of this charter. The Black Necked Crane (BNC), (Grus nigricollis), is one of the high altitude crane among the 15 species found in the world, which during breeding is confined to high altitude wetlands and marshes, of the Quinghai-Tibetan Plateau and eastern Ladakh to Sichuan province. The wintering populations of the crane are found at lower altitudes in Quinghai, on the Yunnan Guizhou Plateau, north eastern Bhutan. In India, so far, Sangti Valley in the north west Arunachal Pradesh, is known to be the only wintering habitat of black-necked crane . However, this year at Pangchen Valley of Zemithang, in the north western corner of the state, bordering China in the north and Bhutan in the west, three cranes were recorded in mid-November. Though there were sporadic reports by local villagers, these cranes, locally known as Thungdungkarma , visit this valley almost every year and stay for 30-45 days. For the first time a photographic evidence of the bird in this valley was collected by the villagers. In India, although the wintering of the crane has been reported in the past from the Apatani Valley in Arunachal Pradesh and Moinabari Forest and Buxa Tiger Reserve in northern West Bengal, Sangti Valley and now Pangchen Valley are perhaps the only wintering sites where the BNC still visits every year. Nyamjang Chu*, which originated in China flows through the Pangchen Valley in southern direction and enters Bhutan as Manas River after joining Tawang Chu . The valley suitable for BNC has been found to be from Brokenthang (27º43′ 51.04″ and 91º42′ 51.08″ E) to Zemithang (27º42′ 38.47″ N and 91º43′ 39.69″ E) which is nearly 3km in length with an average altitude of 6920ft. The average width of the valley has been found to be 0.30kms and the flow of water in this part of the river is gentle with many small seasonal islands and grasslands on both the banks. According to the local villagers, earlier the BNCs used to use one Alnus forest patch, very near to Zemithang settlement area for roasting. However, this year, most of the time, all the three BNCs were found on the other side of the river which is diagonally nearly 1.5km away, towards north-west, from the Alnus forest patch. The Black Necked Crane is classified as Vulnerable (VU C1) in the IUCN Red List 2008, listed in Appendix I of CITES, Appendices I and II of the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS or Bonn Convention) and listed as 'threatened' by Birdlife International. It is also one of the 28 bird species selected as a priority for CEPF investment. It has been categorised as a Schedule I species under the Wildlife (Protection) Act of India, (1972). As there is a religious ban on hunting among the local Monpa communities of the area, the major threat on the wintering habitat of the BNC is mainly due to road construction activities which is in progress on both the sides of the river. However, as the roads under construction are very crucial from the Indian defense point of view, there is an urgent need to find out suitable ways to ensure both safety of the BNC and its habitat . Conclusion In the past ,most of the research work has been done concentrating the Nilgiri tahr so the actual estimation, distribution in wild cannot be estimated, as most of these studies are done at very short intervals confined to spaces which are to be potential habitats for the tahr distribution. Other than these, no newer areas are been surveyed to see their distribution and population. This leads to chances of missing potential habitats, and eventually results in poor population estimates. There may be chances that the tahr uses these habitats for local migration, that cannot be backed up due to lack of data. In order to fill these gaps the current study is being done to get population estimates of the species and their distribution. This would help us in planning the management strategies required for conservation of the habitat and the species. P. P Predict * chu- means river PROJECTS UPDATES The present study is focusing on finding out the number of pocketed populations, connectivity among sub-population etc. because it is an endemic species with narrow range of distribution. Their distributional range is highly fragmented, and the population dynamics are not reported anywhere. Species with specific habitat preference and high degree of endemism are less adaptable to environmental changes. Studies on similar species (like the big horn species) have reported that the population with less than 50 individuals has been wiped out within 50 years and these sensitive species need at least 100 individuals for its long-term survival. Thus it is important to identify the pocketed population, present status of population in their distributional range, to Second Wintering Habitat Of Black Necked Crane In India ensure the long term survival of the species. Pankaj Chandan Nilgiri tahr (Nilgiritragus hylocrius), a mountain goat endemic to southern Western Ghats, is confined to the higher altitudes of Tamil Nadu and Kerala. A shy and wary relative of the Himalayan tahr (Hemitragus jemlahicus) , the Nilgiri tahr limits its movements within an altitude range of 1200 m to 2600 m. At present, two established and viable populations are known from the Nilgiris and high ranges of Kerala, while smaller fragmented populations are known from Anamalais, Palni hills and Meghamalai and Kalakkad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve. Ameen Ahmed COVER STORY 9 Nilgiri Tahr- A Special Study 18 Mousuni Island, 24 km2, is a sea-facing island in the Bay of Bengal with a population of about 20,000. While the population on the island has been on the increase, the size of the island has been diminishing due to sea-level rise. Cyclones and tidal surges have further destroyed the lives and livelihoods of the communities by breaching embankments, wrecking their homes and destroying their harvests due to salt-water incursion from the sea. Lack of climate adaptation strategies and infrastructure will leave them with no option but to become climate refugees in the future. WWF- India has adopted a two-pronged approach to adaptation on Mousuni. While focusing on the immediate needs of disaster management and relief, they are also providing long-term adaptation measures to the next generation of residents. This has been attempted through the Climate Adaptation Centre which houses an electronic Early Warning System to warn villagers of oncoming disasters. The centre also runs a book bank which loans students educational material to help enhance their future prospects. The existing distillation units were studied to look at their efficacy and outputs. Various measures were taken and trials of distillation at different conditions were carried out. Process field testing of the conventional citronella oil distillation unit was carried out in October 2008. The required data was collected after running the unit for two days continuously and holding discussions with the people who use it regularly. Discussions enabled the team to record the process/steps used by people (like drying of grass, cutting etc) which is also important along with the actual distillation process. events The Early Warning System has been linked to Jadavpur University in Kolkata and will receive messages in the likelihood of extreme weather events like cyclones or storms. The Centre also houses relief material like stretchers, torches and medical aid. An organized Disaster Management Team, comprising of village youth has been put together to mobilize the village community towards safety in the event of a disaster. Chimney Speaking at the inauguration of the Adaptation Centre, Anurag Danda, Head of WWF -India's Sundarbans Programme said that, “Mousuni Island is in peril. Its neighbouring island, Sagar, is recording a relative sea level rise of 3.14 mm per year which is alarming. We have to work towards increasing the adaptive capacities of the communities before it is too late.” water outlet Insulation bricks Perforated plate Other adaptation strategies introduced include re-introduction of indigenous salt-tolerant paddy to farmers on the island. As the market value of this variety (tal mugur) is not far behind other high-yielding varieties, farmers on the island have been successful in maintaining their livelihood without having to worry about losing it to salt water incursion. The Climate Adaptation Centre provides paddy seeds to the farmers and also holds information about the various varieties of paddy, their market values and government schemes available to benefit them. Fuel feeding Door Ash door Oil and water outlet Cold water inlet According to Arjan Berkhuysen, Delta Expert, WWFNetherlands, “These problems are similar in deltas all over the world. WWF is looking for natural solutions that respect the dynamics of the system while helping people towards sustainable development in the face of climate change”. On the basis of the above trials and tests, the individual distillation unit design has been modified. Some components of the unit have been redesigned and fabricated. These have been transferred to Thayanakudi village in the Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary. The unit has been installed and further modified on site by end February 2009. The modified unit has been run and relevant measures taken to test its efficacy. Though the unit is being installed in one village, all eco development committees in the sanctuary have been a part of this process. Meetings and discussions have been held with them to enable them to monitor and observe the trials in the field. Some members from each committee will be present to see the modifications and installations to enable future scaling up of the technology. • As the steam does not lose any energy by absorption all through its journey it will speed up the process and the oil will start coming faster than the previous tras shows additional process. The quantity of oil extracted will also be more. • The working environment will be cleaner. P. Mullai COVER STORY Vishaish Uppal The islands of the Sundarbans, in the Bay of Bengal are witnessing and struggling against the negative impacts of a changing environment in the form of tidal surges, cyclones, increased soil and water salinity and sea-level rise. While 40 percent of the 102 islands (on the Indian side) are under forest cover, the remaining area is inhabited by local communities who are losing their homes, land and fields. WWF-India, in partnership with WWF-Netherlands, Hewlett Packard and GTZ, is working with communities on Mousuni Island, which is the second most vulnerable island, to help them cope with and adapt to climate change while increasing their resilience against high intensity events. To do so WWF has initiated several adaptation strategies including the recent inauguration of a Climate Adaptation Centre on March 29, 2009. Regional Climate Change Programme, WWF- India EVENTS 19 Climate Adaptation Centre Inaugurated At Sundarbans 8 Turtle Conservation at Rushikulaya - 2009 The turtle program for the season commenced in the first week of December 2008 with the monitoring of congregating turtles off the Rushikulaya shores. Sorties into the sea were made once every seven days, to monitor the shifting turtle congregation. The information on the congregation was shared with the motorized fishermen of Kontiagarh, Gokhurkuda and Purunabandh along with request to them not to fish in those areas. The sorties continued till mass nesting started. Cold water inlet Grass feeeding drum The mass nesting started on the night of 14th February 2009. The 'arribada' (mass nesting) lasted up to the 20th, during which period our volunteers were patrolling the rookery day & night to keep off feral dogs, jackals and hyenas. Thereafter we installed the 3 kilometer long mesh net fence from the water body at Gokhurkuda shore to halfway up to Kantiagarh on the north and again from the Forest Department watch camp at the southern tip of Gokhurkuda shore to halfway up to Purunabandh on the south. Support for the drum made of clay and rock Fuel feeding chamber Oil and water outlet The main impact on forests is the fuel wood consumption for the distillation units. It has been estimated that about 500 kg of fuel wood per year per acre is being utilized for the distillation process. The main tree species used for fuel are Atalantia racemosa, Anogeissus latifolia, Pterocarpus marsupium, Randia brandisi, Albizzia amara, Cinnamonum malabaricum, Vitex leucoxylon and Albizia odoratissima. Some of these are hardwood species and are also used by wildlife. Lemon grass is generally harvested 2 to 4 times a year depending upon the rainfall and the latitude of the area of cultivation. The cultivated area ranges from 0.75 to 5 acres per household depending on the availability of labour within the family and in the settlement. Each household or two/three households together own a distillation unit which is manufactured locally and is available from the nearby local towns. Oil can also be sold to the traders of these towns. The cost of a litre of oil ranges from Rs. 350-450 based on the Citral content of the oil. A deep water body had developed naturally in between the two stretches of nets which could not be crossed by land predators. Four gates had been provided along the fence to allow for local villagers to go back and forth from sea. Shri Murlidhar C. Bhandare (State Governor) greatly appreciated the efforts made to protect the hatchling. overhead. Occasionally crackers have to be used to drive off the avian predators. The hatchlings were then released near the waves to allow them safe passage to the sea. The entire rookery was cordoned off, leaving a 300 meter stretch for the tourist to indulge in rescue and release of hatchlings. Awareness signages were installed at tourist entry points to sensitize them on the dos and don'ts while at the rookery. The hatching started from 3rd April , 2009. Hatchlings emerge from their nests starting from early evening, peak through the night and thin out with dawn. At night generally hatchlings find their way to the sea safely. The dusk and morning periods are vital, as the entire team, donning gloves have to scurry all over the rookery to pick up hatchlings as they emerge. They (the team) have to reach the An award was initiated for the best team of volunteers and it was presented at the end of the project. This award is in memory of Mr. W. Krishna, a community volunteer and a dedicated team leader for the past three years of our Turtle Conservation Project at Rushikulaya Rookery. Impact of Improvements on the unit and the process • The grate is designed to burn 8 kgs of fuel/hr, hence the fuel consumed per batch is estimated to be 24 kgs/batch (the batch time is assumed to be 3hrs). There would be a saving of almost 40%-50% of fire wood consumption. Hatchlings heading towards the sea EVENTS WWF-India has examined the distillation units and has decided to first improve the design of the individual units to decrease the fuel wood consumption in each distillation process. TIDE, an NGO based in Bangalore which specializes in design of fuel efficient distillation units, is a partner for this activity and is helping set up the modified units and monitor implementation. hatchlings before they are picked up by avian predators hovering WWF-India, Orissa state office Detailed surveys have been carried out in settlements involved in the cultivation of the grass within the landscape. It has been found that lemon grass is being cultivated within the Chinnar and Indira Gandhi Wildlife Sanctuaries and the forest division of Marayoor. A very small amount of area in Malayatoor and Munnar forest divisions is also under lemon grass cultivation. The total area of cultivation of lemon grass in the landscape is approximately 2050 acres. Orissa WWF-India Orissa state office Several tribal communities in the landscape have shifted to settled agriculture and started cultivating lemon grass. The crop is preferred by these communities as it provides an assurance of income in the drought seasons but is not preferred by wildlife. It is cultivable in soil with low fertility; requires minimal labour inputs; has a local market and easy access to loans for tribals for establishing distillation units. Conservation Activities @ Vishaish Uppal COVER STORY 7 State Activities and Event Reducing Use Of Fuel Wood In Production Of Lemon Grass Oil 20 21 The Common Birds and Mammals of Andhra Pradesh: There exists little information on the biodiversity of Andhra Pradesh. To bridge this gap in knowledge, WWF has published a book on common birds and mammals of Andhra Pradesh. This coloured, hand-illustrated book contains information on 150 birds and 60 mammals. It also throws light on the various wildlife laws that prevail in the state and describes the various protected areas of Andhra Pradesh in detail. The book is aimed at young students and amateur naturalists willing to discover the wilderness areas of Andhra Pradesh and will perhaps be the first in the series of books to describe the natural heritage of Andhra Pradesh. Ongoing Projects Interpretation of Nallamalai and Arakku Valley: The Eastern Ghats and the Nallamalis are repositories of a varied habitat, rich in wildlife and natural resources. There is little information regarding the biodiversity of these areas, especially for general reading. Under its attempt to promote ecotourism, APSO is joining hands with the AP Tourism Development Corporation to prepare user-friendly field guides to Nallamalai forest and the Arakku Valley. This shall be initiated after a thorough study of the biodiversity in the Araku Valley and Nallamalais. The field guide will contain information on the commonly found flora and fauna in the region. t lan wP Ne ku C ak Vil u NA k ak Vil akku Vik m i di r Th kkula C NA al a Th nely rya Su anelly ry am Su and sm guk gavila ettu Sin m u n m pa n d y a Sha r dy nka uku Sha akath tate Es mb Sha ppara hu Put kanal iya lam Per ikku y thad Pan ppulkud a Pach d tuka ny Mut ra Colo a Muth ra dy ah Multa pennaku yp Kozh akanal n Chin m Ra B.L angal ir An a y AC 80 N A C N 30 1 Community-based Conservation at Kawal Wildlife Sanctuary: Through two successful fund raising events, APSO collected a corpus to run a two-year project at Kawal Wildlife Sanctuary, Adilabad. This dry deciduous teak and bamboo forest is the second most important tiger habitat in the state. The project aims to spread environmental awareness among the local tribal groups especially among the Gonds, the Nayakpods, the Kolams and the Totis. Interested individuals from different hamlets will be trained in alternative livelihood opportunities. The Integrated Tribal Development Authority (ITDA) and A.P. Forest Department are supporting APSO in this venture. House Shed Minor Severe Death human interference, and has tremendous potential as a haven for urban biodiversity. This upcoming study will focus on faunal diversity of the campus. Through such inventories, APSO is aiming to highlight the importance of institutions in conserving the wildlife of Hyderabad. Inventory of the Biodiversity at University of Hyderabad: The Hyderabad Central University has a large campus with little Himachal Pradesh The Himachal Pradesh office has undertaken project relating to various issues specific to the region:“Income generation activities for sustainable development of tribal people in Kinnaur district of Himachal Pradesh” under Border Area Development Project is one such activity. The aim of the project was “capacity building of local community to enhance their livelihood”. With this perspective natives were exposed to various livelihood enhancement activities through self help groups based on local requirements and local produce. Training programs were held in carpet weaving, shawl weaving, tourist guide course, and river rafting course. An Environmental Awareness Programme for High Altitude Wetlands Conservation was conducted amongst different stakeholders including defence personnel in Kinnaur and Pooh district of Himachal Pradesh. Pamphlets were distributed regarding wise use of wetlands. COVER STORY Upgradation and modernization of watermills (Gharat) for the sustainable development in the hilly region-Kullu district. The project aimed towards identifying total number of water mill sites, their present status, location and uses; set up demonstration units for upgradation of water mill through demonstration, workshops and field visits. Surveys were conducted in Manali, Kullu and Banjar tehsil. 1020 watermills were documented out of which 738 watermills were found in working condition and would be upgraded. The Himachal office has documented more than 18 high altitude wetlands (above 3000 m) in Chamba, Kullu and Kinnaur district. To involve all the stakeholder in this conservation programme, WWF have organised various environmental awareness training and workshops for wetlands conservation through out Himachal Pradesh. Among different stakeholders are students, teachers, NGOs, tour operators, tourist guide, forest field staff, researchers, Mahila Mandal and Indian Army. Awareness material was circulated to impart knowledge to the public in large about the need to preserve the wetlands. WWF-India, South Western Ghats Programme EVENTS Andhra Pradesh 6 Awareness Activities The human elephant Land use pattern and conflict in the Anayirangal elephant sightings in valley, located in the Anayirangal Munnar forest division, Only 138 families have Kerala, has become one of settled so far but even the most pressing issues these have not been able with the local villagers and to harvest any cultivated district administration. This crops due to the damage conflict has increased very caused by elephants. It is recently. The main unimaginable to think of reasons for the increase in the scale of conflict when this conflict is the loss of all 661 families will settle in habitat and habitat this area. fragmentation which block the normal migration The following data has corridors of the animals. been compiled and Human-elephant conflict in mapped to understand the Anayirangal is a major zone, scale and level of threat to human life, conflict: property and crops. The lone tuskers and elephant • Land use and cropping herds are raiding crops patterns Families rendered homeless due to human - elephant conflict. and damaging houses. • Elephant populations People are unable to walk freely through the roads and paths even and their movements during daytime within settlements due to constant movement of • Socio economic data of settlements elephants. Two women lost their lives in 2008 due to elephant attacks, • Data on resource use by the local villagers making this an urgent problem to be studied. On the basis of the above, the possible corridors for the movement of Habitat fragmentation due to human demographic pressure has elephants and the existing problems for elephants in using these increased. The elephants in the Anayirangal region has increasingly corridors have been identified. A breeding population of 27 elephants isolated during the last decade. The free movement of elephants having a sex ratio of 1(male):4(female) have been utilizing this valley towards Mathikettan Shola National Park and Pappathichola is and are frequently moving towards Mathikettan Shola National Park. blocked by expansion of old human settlements, creation of new The main movement path from Anayirangal valley to Mattuppetty, settlements and the development of uncontrolled tourism. The large Munnar area through old Devikulam and Silent valley has been number of resorts in the northern side of Anayirangal especially at blocked by resorts and school zone at Chinnakkanal and Vilakku area Chinnakkanal, block the movement of elephant As a short term measure, the Settlement Vs Food Crop Damage from October 2007 to June 2008 towards Mattuppettytribal department has 350 Gunderla region. erected a solar power fence in one part of the newly 300 Over the past one year, the created tribal settlement. project has collated Preliminary surveys have 250 detailed information on the indicated that this has in fact 200 nature of the problem, the shifted the human elephant loss to property and crops conflict to nearby 150 due to the conflict and the settlements. Out of eighty behavioral patterns of the elephant attack incidents in 100 elephants to help develop the year 2008, there were a mitigation strategy. four deaths, six severely 050 Banana injured and sixty six people Tapbca 000 Preliminary data collection suffered minor injuries. Raggi in seven selected villages Cahans in Anayirangal valley has Some further studies are Watermelon shown that the conflict has also being conducted with Beans Cabbage increased tremendously the help of the Kerala Forest after the land assignment Department and local for 661 landless tribal villagers to comprehensively Settlement families in eucalyptus and evaluate and assess the pine plantation. The area and explore possible plantations done by the co-existence options for both Kerala Forest Department was to protect and improve the catchments human and elephants. of Anayirangal reservoir and had become a good habitat for elephants. World Wetlands Day Celebration Andhra Pradesh and Shimla Andhra Pradesh - Essay Competition Painting Competition Himachal Pradesh - Folk Song Theater Activity STAFF AWARD hi nn ng al ak M na l ul at ha ra Pa Mu tt n Pu tha uka d Sh thu dlkk ul an pp ka ara am ra pa Est a n Si dym te ng e Su uka ttu n ry an d a m el y N AC Vl la Th kk id u ir N AC WWF-India's Meritorious Service award was conferred to Dr. Harish Kumar Guleria, Landscape Coordinator, Pilibhit Project Office, WWF-India for the commendable and dedicated work performed by him. C 1 N An a yl ra AC Damage (Acre) 30 COVER STORY 5 Mitigating Human-Elephant Conflict In Anayirangal Let us join hands to wish Dr. Guleria the best in his career ahead. EVENTS He joined the organization in year 2001. Due to his hard work the conservation efforts in UP part of Terai Arc landscape have steadily progressed and it has shown impact on ground, both in the community areas and with the forest department. Dr. Guleria has led the team in an exemplary manner to implement the tiger conservation work. STAFF AWARDS M. Rameshan Dr. Guleria 22 KIDS POEM : 23 NATURE God has gifted us nature, And he has only created every creature, Where there are no fights, And people have their own rights. Where the birds live happily, And sing sweet songs melodiously, Peace messages Dove brings, and fly freely spreading out their wings. Where there are tall and green trees, Here blows a cool and pleasant breeze, Where we have the rocky mountains, And the wonderful fountains. The farmers harvest their crops, And the rabbit hops, Children play, Chocolates they want is all they say. Here we have the sun's bright glow, And the rivers flow, Here the forests are dark and deep, And the reptiles creep. Why let this beautiful nature destroy, Saving nature is the most valuable thing we should try, Why to waste time, And we should throw away all the crime. Be brave and ignore your fright, To make this nature more bright, Save water and plants, To give nature a wonderful sight. Keeping this nature ever green, And keeping it neat and clean, Is the work of every human being, To give nature a great scene. Written by : Rishika Chatterjee Age :: 11, Springdales School, Class V Area of WWF-India Work k i d s found here include wet evergreen forests and Sholas in the higher elevations. This region is a veritable treasure trove of biodiversity and most of it is still to be studied and understood. The area is also crucial for the ecological goods and services they provide. Forty four rivers originate Map prepared by: IGCMC, WWF-India from here, providing water to several major cities of the states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu. The important rivers that provide water to cities/districts are; the Periyar for Ernakulam, the Chalakkudy for Trichur, the Neyyar and Karamana for Thiruvananthapuram, the Bharatpuzha for Palghat and Meenachil and Muvattupuzha for Kottayam. Forest products provide an important source of fuel wood, fodder, food and shelter to local communities and indigenous groups living in and around them. The tourism value of the area is also very high; managed effectively and equitably, this can provide an important source of livelihood to local and indigenous communities. WWF-India has identified a landscape of about 7,000 km2 south of the Palghat gap as a priority conservation landscape. The area is made up of undulating terrain including the highest mountain peak (Anaimudi) of South India. It spreads across 14 Protected Areas and 11 forest divisions across the states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu and includes a number of other land uses such as tea and coffee plantations, subsistence and commercial agriculture, high density tourism areas as well as important river systems. The landscape comprises of a variety of ecosystems ranging from wet evergreen to dry deciduous to scrub forest including the unique shola ecosystem. This landscape is home to the largest population of Endangered Nilgiri tahr (Nilgiritragus hylocrius), a species endemic to the Western Ghats. Other threatened mammals found in this landscape are the lion-tailed macaque Macaca silenus and the Asian small-clawed otter Aonyx cinerea. Some of the charismatic mega fauna found here include elephant, tiger and gaur. The region is also home to a number of tribal communities and forest-dependent people who help in ensuring the long-term integrity of this unique ecosystem. PONDICHERRY TAMIL NADU KERALA W W F - I n d i a envisaged that a well defined l a n d s c a p e approach would be more effective way to address the conservation issues in Southern Western Ghats. It was envisaged that the Southern Western Ghats Landscape should encompass the central region of Kerala and a d j o i n i n g Anaimalai forests in Tamil Nadu. A rationale for this selection is provided below: • It forms one of the largest contiguous blocks of 'good' forest cover in the Southern-Western Ghats. • It is large enough (approximately 7,000 km2) to be able to 'pilot' an approach to large-scale conservation but at the same time of a scale and scope that was feasible in terms of execution given resource, capacity and political realities. • Part of this landscape has already been identified as a priority by the Kerala Forest Department (KFD). • The area was already fairly well protected;15% of the whole area is covered by a Protected Area network. • Apart from the fact that pressures were manageable, there were a number of potential partners and relatively strong Forest Departments, who could all come together to provide a common effort. The overall aim of the Southern-Western Ghats landscape conservation programme is to ensure the long term ecological security of this landscape based on multi-stakeholder participation and inter-sectoral coordination. The key threats to this landscape, identified through a series of stakeholder meetings and workshops have been identified as: forest conversion, illegal tree felling and poaching, unsustainable extraction of forest products, human-wildlife conflict and unplanned infrastructure development. WWF- India is working on all of these issues with a range of partners within the landscape. WWF has secured support for specifically working in the areas of developing sustainable livelihoods to reduce pressure on forest resources, developing management strategies to address human-elephant conflict, restoring degraded forest areas, and understanding the conservation status of the Endangered Nilgiri tahr. COVER STORY Historically, WWF-India had envisaged a well defined landscape approach with a reasonably strong presence in the region. The organization has been actively involved in the Western Ghats region since the early nineties through the Biodiversity 'Hotspots' Conservation Programme (1993-2005) with support from the MacArthur Foundation and the Ford Foundation. Over the years it has interacted with stakeholders like the State Forest Departments, the research Institutes and the local communities. The WWF Species Programme is represented in the Western Ghats through its activities related to conservation of tiger and elephant habitats in the Nilgiri landscape region. The Southern-Western Ghats also emerged as a priority terrestrial and freshwater ecoregion for WWF with the entire Western Ghats complex identified as one of the Global 200: Priority Ecoregions for global conservation. ANDHRA PRADESH KANATAKA 4 The Western Ghats perform important hydrological and watershed functions. Approximately 245 million people live in the peninsular Indian states nd Feb 2 , 2009 is celebrated world wide as World Wetlands day to commemorate the signing of Ramsar Convention in 1971 in Iran. There are presently 158 Contracting Parties to the Convention, with 1831 wetland sites, equivalent to 1 7 0 m i l l i o n Mr Rabbi Shergill awarding the First Prize to Ryan h e c t a r e s , International School, Noida designated for inclusion in the Ramsar List of Wetlands of International Importance. At WWF-India this year, World Wetland Day was celebrated with a difference and with an aim to create awareness on the need to protect this highly fragile ecosystem. that receive most of their water supply from rivers originating in the Western Ghats. Thus, the soils and waters of this region sustain the livelihoods of millions of people. With the possible exception of the Indo-Malayan region, no other hotspot impacts the lives of such a large population. South Western Ghats An Introduction The South Western Ghats cover an area of 12,500 km2 in the states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu and harbour a rich floral and faunal diversity which includes 4,000 flowering plants. The faunal diversity includes 48 genera of large and medium sized mammals, 475 species of birds, 60 reptile genera and 313 species of butterflies. This region harbours high levels of endemism including 30 endemic lizard species, 57 endemic snake species, 87 endemic species of amphibians and 84 endemic species of freshwater fishes. Some of the important and unique habitat types Wetlands are some of the world's most alive and productive ecosystems on which several species of birds, fish, amphibians, mammals and human settlements thrive and coexist. They truly bring out the life-sustaining characteristics of water along with its rich cultural and economic values (agriculture and fisheries). Therefore, it is necessary to create awareness on the necessity of conserving this very important ecosystem. As a precursor to the event on Feb 2, a musical extravaganza called 'Aqua Symphony' was held on Jan 31st. Several schools across the city competed with zeal, by presenting their original compositions on the central theme of water and wetlands. The event was held at the WWF-India auditorium. Among those judging the competition were Sam Lal, Editor Blender magazine, Randeep (from the band Men Who Pause) and Gaurav Gilani (from the band Crimson) On Feb 2, World Wetlands Day was f o r m a l l y commemorated with the winning bands- Ryan International, Laxman Public School and G.D. Goenka Public School being awarded. The teams performed G D Goenka World School performing at Aqua Symphony t h e i r w i n n i n g compositions. Famous Indian Pop musician, Rabbi Shergill, was the chief guest at the event. Vandana Singh, WWF-India The Western Ghats, a global Biodiversity Hotspot, extends along the west coast of India and cover an area of about 180,000 km2.Though it has less than 6% of the land area of India, the Western Ghats contain more than 30% of all plant, fish, reptile, amphibian, bird, and mammal species found in India. Like other Biodiversity Hotspots, the Western Ghats have a high proportion of endemic species. The region also has a spectacular assemblage of large mammals and is home to several nationally significant wildlife sanctuaries, tiger reserves, and national parks. The Western Ghats contain numerous medicinal plants and important genetic resources such as the wild relatives of grains, fruits and spices. Mr Ravi Singh, Secretary General & CEO, WWF-India, urged the student community to join in large numbers to ensure that the environment is protected and conserved with the role of each ecosystem in maintaining the ecological balance well understood. Dr Parikshit Gautam, Director Freshwater and Wetlands-WWFIndia affirmed the need for preserving wetland ecosystems and said that such events will raise awareness on the importance of this ecosystem and the need to conserve it . The chief guest Mr Rabbi Shergill, speaking on the occasion, felt that these original compositions by the bands showed the extent of awareness amongst the present generation on the importance of wetlands. Additionally, WWF-India's film on Ladakh, 'Living with Change' was showcased on the day. The film records the testimonials from communities which are coping to survive in a changing ecosystem since the region has several High Altitude Wetlands dotting the arid Trans-Himalayan landscape. Young Climate Savers Website Launched A WWF-India & Tetra Pak initiative After the successful completion of Phase 1 of the Young Climate Savers (YCS) initiative, WWF-India and Tetra Pak announced the launch of the YCS website, in Hyderabad This website is the first Indian website for educating school students on climate change and energy issues. Honorable Speaker of Andhra Pradesh (AP) State Assembly, Shri. K.R Suresh Reddy formally launched the website at a function held at the Bhaskar Auditorium, Birla Science Centre here. Shri Jayesh Ranjan (IAS), Managing Director, AP Tourism Development Board, a well known personality and respected for his support in the field of climate change education and awareness programme, also graced the occasion, and along with other dignitaries from WWFIndia, Tetra Pak and teachers, students from various schools. Southern-Western Ghats The Young Climate Savers is a programme launched with an aim to create awareness across the student fraternity in India on climate change, and through them to reach out to the larger community and to influence them to become 'climate savers'. WWF-India partnered with Tetra Pak in implementing the Young Climate Savers programme. Following up on its commitment to emission reduction, and realizing the importance of educating children on climate change, Tetra Pak partnered with WWF-India in November 2007 for the Young Climate Savers programme. The YCS ,is an education for sustainable development initiative aiming to educate 20,000 school children across India, and through them, to reach out and influence a larger audience on the impacts of climate change and the importance of mitigating it. The YCS initiative is envisioned to be implemented over the course of several years. YCS Phase 1 reaches to over 20000 students at over 200 schools in India. “The rate at which climate change is taking place is extremely alarming. While we take pride in the fact that our packaging is environment friendly, we strongly believe that collective effort is what will finally make a difference. Our partnership with WWF reiterates our commitment to create awareness and motivate the young to promote and lead energy efficient and environmentally sensitive lives. Over the past year, we have achieved our target of 20,000 students and now want to reach out to a larger national and international audience with the launch of the YCS Website.” added Mr. Jaideep Gokhale, Programme Head- Food for Development Office & Environment, Tetra Pak India Pvt. Ltd. KIDS WWF-India, Vishaish Uppal COVER STORY 3 Conserving Wetlands Through Awareness In School Children 24 The Story of ASIA'S LIONS By Divyabhanusinh Chavda 25 Lions once roamed the Asian continent from Palestine to Palamau. Over the centuries they were progressively wiped out throughout their range, ultimately being confined to a relict population in the Gir forest and its surrounding areas in Saurashtra. For more than half a century now, this has been the home of the only lion population outside Africa. Today about 400 lions survive in this region, but the animal's precarious existence has virtually disappeared from our consciousness. How this state of affairs has come to pass, and what is the status of the surviving lions, is the theme of this book. The writer introduces the lion and its present habitat, and goes on to examine through written and visual records the interaction between this majestic animal and human beings in Asia, from the earliest available historical records to the present day. Through Sanskrit, Persian, and other contemporaneous sources the profound effect the lion has The Coal Dilemma Editor S.K.Chand READER'S ZONE had on human civilization and culture, and the story of the destruction of the species in Asia is traced. Also documented here are the censuses conducted in the last hundred years to monitor its population dynamics, and the history of the attempts to find a second home for the lion, which still continue. The book evaluates efforts made for the conservation of the species in the first half of the 20th century by British administrators and more remarkably by the last two nawabs of Junagadh. The status in independent India is recorded, with indications of what the future holds for the lion in the 21st century. The work is of a unique nature as very rarely has an account of any species from historical times been attempted, one exception being this author's internationally acclaimed research on the cheetah in India. While there are innumerable books on the lions of Africa, there have been only three books about the lions in India ever written in English, none of which is easily accessible. There is, in fact, no book on the species' history either for Africa or for Asia and this is a pioneering attempt. As the climate policy under National Action Plan continues to unveil, a new publication by TERI (The Energy and Resources Institute) and WWF brings out thought provoking analysis of the state of coal as an energy resource in India. Titled “The Coal Dilemma”, released during one of the side-events of the Delhi Sustainable Development Summit (DSDS) 2009, highlights the urgency to review the supply and availability of coal in context of exposition of overall energy security. Earth Hour began in Sydney in 2007, when 2.2 million homes and businesses switched off their lights for one hour. In 2008 the message had grown into a global sustainability movement, with 50 million people switching off their lights.It assumes greater importance now as 2009 is a critical year for action on climate change with world leaders due to meet at the UN Conference on Climate Change in Copenhagen come December, to sign a new deal superseding the Kyoto Protocol. This was Earth Hour-the world's global election, between Earth and global warming. By participating in Earth Hour and voting for Earth, a billion people across the world got together to form a worldwide constituency that is eager to demand quick and fair action to crack the problem of climate change. A host of high profile ambassadors across the world extended their support to the campaign, most notably Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Desmund Tutu, UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon and Oscar winning actor Kate Blanchett. In India, Bollywood actor Aamir Khan and cricketer Sachin Tendulkar supported the campaign. From India-Delhi,Mumbai, Bangalore and fifty other cities joined the list of over 4000 cities across the world to VOTE EARTH. The call to action was fairly simple: turn off lights for one hour and stand up to show action and solidarity on climate change. But the message was much larger and the work that remains to be done even more so. In this way, what began as a symbolic show of support got transformed into a national movement that caught unprecedented attention and an overwhelming support. Reports indicate that at least 5 million people across India participated in Earth Hour by switching off their lights from 8:30-9:30pm on 28th March, thereby making this the largest ever environmental campaign in the country, in terms of public outreach and participation. From the icons of history like The Great Pyramids in Egypt and Eiffel Tower in Paris to the symbols of modern architecture- Empire State Building in New York and Petronas towers in Malaysia, all switched off in support of Earth Hour. So did historical monuments like Qutub Minar, Humanyun's Tomb, Red Fort and Old Fort in Delhi. Grand old educational institutions like Jamia Milia Islamia and Indian Institute of Technology, hotel chains of the ITC Welcome Group , PVR Cinemas, and all offices and facilities of over a 100 top public and private sector organizations- Reserve Bank of India, Infosys, Wipro, HSBC to name a few, added to the long list of landmarks from India that observed Earth Hour. Several youth groups, community organizations, religious groups and governments took ownership of the campaign to help make it a success from Cochin to For its part, the Environment Department of the Govt. of Delhi adopted a proactive approach and appealed to over 2000 resident welfare associations, schools, market traders' associations and the Archaeological Survey of India to turn off non-essential lights in support of the campaign. During that hour, the drop in power demand due to Earth Hour was estimated to be about 600 MW in Delhi. Similarly, there have been reports from other cities, citing savings by the power distribution companies, making the cumulative energy savings to the tune of 1000 MW nationally. However, the impact of Earth Hour should not be measured in power saved alone, but more so in terms of the awareness that it helped spread about the cause and the momentum that it gathered. Earth Hour is indeed a symbolic act and history is testimony to symbolic acts that have triggered great movements. The challenge that remains is to embed this voluntary act as a lifestyle choice and make it a genuine and self-perpetuating movement which merits support due to the benefit contained in the choice. In the global climate order, while much will get decided in the domain of policies and politics, and technologies that take the world to the path of low carbon future will be developed, it is essential to keep climate change on the top of the policy and scientific agenda, with the onus on world leaders, to take the right decisions for the planet. And that is what Earth Hour will continue to strive for. Aarti Khosla COVER STORY The Book brings out the fallacy of abundance of coal related to supply, state of domestic reserve and external supply security challenges.It discusses the problems afflicting the mining of coal including social and environmental concerns and reviews merits and demerits of coal beneficiation and also brings out a range of issues (covering alternative technology choices, clean coal technology, improved technology for power generation) that will be critical for us to move towards an efficient and cleaner coaleconomy in the coming decades. Gangtok and Dehradun to Bangalore. Climate change team READER'S ZONE Reader's Zone Earth Hour 2009 On 28th March this year, beginning on Chatham Island in New Zealand, one of the first places on Earth where dawn strikes, towns and cities in over 80 countries across the globe turned off their lights for an hour, to draw attention to climate change. 2 COVER STORY News Across The Globe cover story New Species hotspot in remote Cambodian Mekong Cantor's Giant softshell turtle, thought to be extinct in Cambodia since 2003 has been rediscovered in a section of the Mekong River almost untouched by humans. The findings are the result of a series of surveys jointly conducted by WWF Cambodia, the Fisheries Administration (FiA) and Forestry Administration (FA) of the Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF) in 2006/7. international 1 Arctic nations take important first step towards saving polar bears ITC Grand Central, Mumbai Five nations committed by treaty to conserve polar bears have come up with a resolution linking the future of the species to urgent global action on climate change. The five Arctic nations signed a binding 1973 Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears that includes provisions to protect polar bears and their habitat. They have agreed to come up with a circumpolar action plan for the management of bears, and to formally designate the Polar Bear Specialist Group of the World Conservation Union (IUCN) as the scientific advisory body to the Agreement. These both were measures proposed by WWF. Ultimately, the polar bear nations must join with other countries at the UN climate conference in Copenhagen in December 2009 to sign an effective global deal on climate change that will save the polar bears' Arctic sea ice habitat, along with the entire ice ecosystem. Delegates of 14 countries attending the World Water Forum signed pledges of support to a growing call to bring into force a global water treaty that has languished in limbo for more than a decade as anxiety grows about the increased potential for conflict in a world increasingly short of water. Recognised 16 countries signed up to the UN International Convention on Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses (the UN Watercourses Convention) - Finland, Germany, Hungary, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Namibia, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Qatar, South Africa, Sweden, Syria and Uzbekistan. The delegates said they shared WWF's concern that the poor coordination in river basin regulation between nations “represents a major threat to international peace and to the world's energy and food security.” The pledge also noted that climate change would worsen the global water crisis. INTERNATIONAL Interest grows in neglected global water treaty © Pankaj Chandan Ashoka Hotel, New Delhi EARTH HOUR 26 Light switched off at Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus Mumbai. Contents Cover Story Project Updates Earth Hour 2009 1. South-Western Ghats 3. Mitigating HumanElephant Conflict in Anayirangal 5. Reducing Use of 7. fuel wood in production of lemon grass oil Nilgiri Tahr- A Special Study. 9. WWF-India reintroduces gharials into river Ganges 10. Saving The Dolphins From Extinction 11. The Rare Red 12. Kids Climate Adaptation 19. Centre Inaugurated in Sundarbans State Activities and Events Poem 23. World Wetlands Day Celebrations 24. Young Climate Savers Website Launched 24. 20. - Orissa 13. Global Forestry and Trade Network (GFTN)- towards protecting our forest wealth Sustainable Fisheries for a Healthy Marine Ecosystem Events - Andhra Pradesh - Himachal Pradesh 15. Staff Award 22. Visit to Gorshing 17. Glacier of Western Arunachal Pradesh Second Wintering 18. Habitat of Black Necked Crane in India www.wwfindia.org International Reader's Zone Asia's Lions 25. News Across the Globe The Coal Dilemma 25. 26. Foreword On another event, we especially would like to thank each and every supporter of the environment for the role that they have played in ensuring the success of Earth Hour–a campaign that received unprecedented public support. The event did show that citizens of India can and will respond to contributing to a better environment, through a symbolic action which joined them to a global link of better good for the earth. Earth Hour also demonstrated that people, institutions, businesses and government are aware of their role in bringing about a change in conserving the resources of our planet. In the coming days, the mandate is clear: it is for us to convert thought into action, action that is translated not only at individual levels but at policy conception and execution stages too. It is hoped that nationally and globally the issue of saving our planet receives priority in the agenda of all developed and underdeveloped nations. It is hoped that the UNFCCC COP 15 at CopenhagenDecember, 2009, will bring nations together to set aside some of their differences and work towards a change which is beneficial for our living planet. Dear Friends, We continue with our landscapes of hope series with special focus on South Western Ghats and a special story on the Earth Hour Campaign. The South-Western Ghats landscape covers a large part of South India and is an acknowledged biodiversity hotspot. We hope after having read the Panda you would have had an understanding of the landscape and the challenges that WWF-India faces to ensure that the landscape continues to retain its purity . Some of you have send us very interesting responses showing your interest in the articles published. We request you to send us any article which you would like to be published regarding topics you feel strongly about. Looking forward to your feedback WWF-India As we write, the tragedy of the Sundarbans is unfolding: destruction, disease, forced migration and de-homing - occurring simultaneously. Relief measures can never be timely in such events as the Aila cyclone, yet the work and reach of the NGOs contributing to ameliorate human suffering and the provision of relief materials is laudable. WWF India has also reached out to the communities in the affected areas but the work of rehabilitation is an immense task - one that needs close coordination with the government agencies and the several organisations in the area. A lot of our work relating to community interventions and climate change adaptation will need to start again. Our teams are showing their spirit and resilience. From the Editor’s Desk Dear Friends, Shaila Sam Editor Editorial Board Design Input : Dr. Parikshit Gautam, Mita Nangia Goswami, Dr. Prakash Rao, Dr. Dipankar Ghose & Nikita Aggarwal : Nikita Aggarwal Published by : WWF-India 172 - B, Lodi Estate, New Delhi - 110003 Tel : +91 11 41504797 Website : www.wwfindia.org Designed by : Ashish Rohilla at Kalavaani Printed by : Press Tech Litho Pvt. Ltd. A WWF-India publication for members. Responsibility for views / opinions expressed lies with the author(s). WWF-India Ravi Singh Secretary General & CEO WWF-India South Western Ghats landscape South Western Ghats landscape WWF-India, Ameen Ahmed Ameen Ahmed WWF-India Newsletter www.wwfindia.org PANDA www.wwfindia.org Vol - I / Issue - I Jan - Mar. 2009