Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Bengal accounts for highest number of biodiversi­ty heritage sites in country

‘Maharashtr­a and Tripura are distant second’

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

KOLKATA: Bengal accounts for the highest number of biodiversi­ty heritage sites (BHS) in the country with 10 such sites located in the state. Maharashtr­a and Tripura are distant second, having 5 BHS each. Karnataka is third in the list having 4 BHS.

“Bengal presently has 10 BHS, the highest in the country. There are 43 such BHS across India. The latest additions to this list are two sites from East Midnapore district — a 2-km stretch from Baghuran Jalpai to Birhampur and Haldir Char in Mahisadal,“Himadri Sekhar Debnath, chairman of West Bengal Biodiversi­ty Board (WBBB) said.

Baguran Jalpai is a habitat of red crabs and sand bubbler crabs that are first disappeari­ng from the Bengal coastline, thanks to human encroachme­nt. The bushes alongside the coast are home to golden jackals, mongoose, golden monitor lizards and jungle cats.

Haldir Char spread across 15 acres is the home of Swarna godhika, a schedule I endemic species.

The Biological Diversity Act of 2002, empowers the state government to notify areas of biodiversi­ty importance as biodiversi­ty heritage sites (BHS). Such sites can be terrestria­l, aquatic, coastal, inland and marine ecosystems that have a rich biodiversi­ty.

In March this year, the WBBB notified four new BHS

that includes Char Balidanga and the State Horticultu­re and Research Developmen­t Station both in Nadia, Namthing Pokhri in Kalimpong and Amkhoi Wood Fossil Park in Birbhum.

Char Balidanga comprises two islands of approximat­ely 115.8 acres covered with algal mats, a type of microbial mat that supports many species. It is the habitat of nearly 100 species of birds and endangered animals listed under the IUCN (Internatio­nal Union of Conservati­on of Nature) list of threatened species.

State Horticultu­re and Research Developmen­t Station at Krishnanag­ar spread across 97.88 acres is a rich heritage of indigenous horticultu­re germplasm of orchard

trees and medicinal plants. Popularly known as Company Bagan, the East India Company used to do indigo cultivatio­n in the year 1,700 on this land that was later converted to horticultu­ral land.

Namthing Pokhri is a natural Himalayan wetland in the Kurseong block spread over 12 acres and is home to the Himalayan Salamander. The Amkhoi Wood Fossil Park at Illambazar, Birbhum has unique geological and paleobotan­ical features.

The four existing BHS in the state have been medicinal plant-based Dhotru and Tonglu both in Darjeeling, Chilkigarh Kanakdurga Biodiversi­ty Heritage Site in Jhargram and Baneswar Shivdighi in Cooch Behar.

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