The Hindu (Madurai)

IUCN representa­tive to be an observer in Nilgiri Tahr survey

- Geetha Srimathi

With a resolve to remove the Nilgiri Tahr (Nilgiritra­gus hylocrius) from the endangered status, the Tamil Nadu government will conduct a synchronis­ed survey of the State animal from April 29.

The three-day exercise is being done to estimate the population of the Tahrs, which once roamed the length and breadth of the Anamalai and Nilgiris landscape. The animal is listed as an endangered species by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) and protected under Schedule-I of the Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972.

There are around 3,000 Tahrs in the Western Ghats, according to a report released by the World Wildlife Fund India in 2015, and a sizeable number of them is concentrat­ed in the Anamalai Tiger Reserve (ATR). In 2020, the Nature Conservati­on Foundation found around 510 individual­s in the ATR, which houses the secondlarg­est population of the species after the Eravikulam National Park in Kerala.

“We have roped in WWF and the Wildlife Institute of India for the population estimation. The third is IUCN, whose country director will be an observer in the exercise,” said Supriya Sahu, Additional Chief Secretary to the Department of Environmen­t, Climate Change and Forest.

For the purpose of the survey that is being done in coordinati­on with Kerala’s Forest Department, the habitats in Tamil Nadu have been divided into 13 forest divisions, 100 forest beats, and 140 feasible blocks. More emphasis has been given to areas along the Kerala border, Ms. Sahu said. While the bounded-count method will be used in all the areas, the double observer method will be adopted additional­ly in large contiguous landscapes having a major population in two areas, such as the Grass Hills National Park and the Mukurthi National Park; one block in the Silent Valley National Park; and two blocks in the Eravikulam National Park.

With the result of the estimation as the baseline data, the Project Nilgiri Tahr will focus on stabilisin­g the population by taking steps to address the threats faced by the mountain ungulates, and possibly reintroduc­e the animal in sites such as the Sathyamang­alam Tiger Reserve.

 ?? ?? There are around 3,000 Tahrs in the Western Ghats, according to a report released by the World Wildlife Fund India in 2015.
There are around 3,000 Tahrs in the Western Ghats, according to a report released by the World Wildlife Fund India in 2015.

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