Deccan Chronicle

10 more pygmy hogs released in Manas Park

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Guwahati, June 10: Ten captive-bred pygmy hogs, the world’s smallest and rarest wild pigs, have been released in Manas National Park of Assam.

Found only in tall dense alluvial grasslands, pygmy hogs are incredibly shy. This is the third instance that pygmy hogs have successful­ly been introduced in the National Park, a release issued by biodiversi­ty conservati­on group ‘Aarayank’, a key partner of the programme, said on Friday. Fourteen pygmy hogs were released in Manas National Park in 2020 and 12 in 2021.

The pygmy hog’s coat is brown with a few dark hairs. Its head is tapered with a slight crest of hair on the forehead and the back of its neck.

The animals were released by the Pygmy Hog Conservati­on Programme (PHCP), taking the total number of such mammals released in the Park so far to 36. The pygmy hogs were released on Friday and Wednesday in Rupahi grasslands in the Bhuyanpara range of the Park. The PHCP plans to release 60 pygmy hogs in Manas National Park by 2025. With this, the number of pygmy hogs reintroduc­ed into the wild by the PHCP has reached 152 since 1996. Six pygmy hogs were captured from the Bansbari range of Manas National Park in 1996 to start the breeding programme. The reintroduc­tion of captive hogs in the wild began in 2008.

Initially, three protected areas in Assam were selected for better protection and restoratio­n of alluvial grasslands, and over the next decade, 35 hogs were released in Sonai-Rupai Wildlife Sanctuary, 59 in Orang National Park, and 22 in Barnadi Wildlife Sanctuary.

Manas Field Director Dr. Vaibhav Chandra Mathur said that pygmy hog (Porcula salvania) has been recovered from the verge of extinction in the wild. “Manas Tiger Reserve serves as the source stock of hogs for the Pygmy Hog Conservati­on Programme, and this tranche of supplement­ation with a captivebre­d population is going to strengthen conservati­on efforts, especially for tall wet grasslands, for which the pygmy hog serves as an indicator species,” Mathur said.

In 1995, Durrell Wildlife Conservati­on Trust of the UK partnered with the Assam government’s forest department, the Wild Pig Specialist Group of Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature, and the Union Ministry of Environmen­t, Forest and Climate changes to form the Pygmy Hog Conservati­on Programme (PHCP).

Currently, the project is being implemente­d by NGOs Aarayank and

EcoSystems Ind.

Aaranyak’s Chief Executive Officer Dr. Bibhab Kumar Talukdar said that conservati­on of lesser-known species such as Pygmy Hog, Bengal Florican, and Hispid Hare and other grassland obligatory species is equally important as protecting animals such as Tiger and One-Horned Rhinoceros.

Durrell Wildlife Conservati­on Trust’s CEO Lesley Dickie, who came to Assam to take part in the programme said, “Durrell has been committed to conserving the tiny but precious pygmy hog, and their grassland home, for decades”.

FOUND ONLY in tall dense alluvial grasslands, pygmy hogs are incredibly shy. The pygmy hog’s coat is brown with a few dark hairs. Its head is tapered with a slight crest of hair on the forehead and the back of its neck.

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