The Hindu (Erode)

Tamil Nadu, Kerala to count Nilgiri tahrs in a synchronis­ed survey from April 29

This is a massive exercise of its kind being taken up for the rst time in the country for the Nilgiri tahr, says Supriya Sahu, Additional Chief Secretary, Environmen­t, Climate Change and Forest

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Five months after the launch of the Project Nilgiri Tahr, Tamil Nadu is all set to estimate the population of its State animal.

Forest Department­s of Tamil Nadu and Kerala will jointly count the population of the mountain ungulate in a three-day synchronis­ed census starting from April 29.

Supriya Sahu, Additional Chief Secretary, Environmen­t, Climate Change and Forest, told The Hindu bounded count and double observer methods would be used to estimate the population of the species. The survey would be carried out by 700 people.

“This is a massive exercise of its kind being taken up for the ‡rst time in the country for the Nilgiri tahr. I think it is going to give some fascinatin­g informatio­n about certain aspects of the project, which will be very useful for us. Also, we feel that this is the ‡rst time we are doing the survey in a very organised and scienti‡c fashion, at a large scale. So, we may get very good baseline data about the population estimation that we are doing”, said Ms. Sahu.

Principal Chief Conservato­r of Forests and Chief Wildlife Warden Srinivas R. Reddy said the Eravikulam and Silent Valley National Parks of Kerala, which are contiguous with the tahr habitats in Tamil Nadu, would be covered.

“The Kerala teams are also following the same counting methods. Though there are other tahr habitats in Kerala, we are focusing on the ones adjoining tahr habitats in Tamil Nadu. We have requested them to cover patches, which are continuous habitats with a large number of tahrs that tend to move both sides,” he said.

Nilgiri tahrs prefer montane grasslands, with steep and rocky terrains at an altitude between 300 and 2,600 metres above sea level. A little over 3,100 Nilgiri tahrs were believed to be living in highly fragmented habitats in the Western Ghats in Tamil Nadu and Kerala, ranging between the Nilgiris in the north and the Kanniyakum­ari hills in the south, as per a 2015 study by WWF-India.

WWF-India, the Wildlife Institute of India and the Nature Conservati­on Foundation are involved in formulatin­g scienti‡c and accurate technique of population enumeratio­n.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? A total of 700 people will be involved in the estimation of the Nilgiri tahr for three days.
FILE PHOTO A total of 700 people will be involved in the estimation of the Nilgiri tahr for three days.

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