A group of conservationists are trying to replant native trees in the Western Ghats
Sibi Arasu
India is home to
iconic wildlife like tigers, dholes and even lions, as well as many
species found nowhere else in the world. But they share the subcontinent
with the world’s second-largest human population – and as India’s 1.3
billion people vie for space with wilderness, wilderness has often lost
out. Such is the case in the Nilgiris district of the South Indian
state of Tamil Nadu. Once covered in a mosaic of montane forest and
grassland, the Nilgiris was transformed into a land of plantations over
the past two centuries. But now efforts are underway to restore the
landscape to its native state. Stretching 1,600 kilometers (990
miles) along India’s western coast from Tamil Nadu at the subcontinent’s
southern tip north to Maharashtra, the Western Ghats mountain range is
considered as one of the most biodiverse places in the world and listed
as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The range is home to thousands of
different plants and animals, and is also host to a high level of
endemism – meaning that many of species that live there are found
nowhere else. The Nilgiris district sits squarely in the Western
Ghat’s southern portion. Its 2,565 sq km were once covered in a mixture
of tropical montane forests – locally called “sholas” – interspersed
with grassland. But in the last 200-odd years, the district has lost
around 80% of its native vegetation, according to a local official. These
forests are now replaced by sprawling tea estates, coffee plantations,
exotic tree plantations, and by invasive species of grass and small
plants. Along with the loss of forest habitat, plants and animals are
also disappearing. Undisturbed shola forest near Doddakombai, Nilgiris. Photo by Sibi Arasu“Over
the past many decades, the exotics have taken over the Nilgiris and I
think only around 20% of the district still retains native forests,”
said C Badrasamy, a retired Divisional Forest Officer who has more than
three decades of experience in the field. However, some in the
district are trying to reverse the situation. Through reforesting small
tracts of land, conservationists in Nilgiris hope to return their
mountain home to its pre-colonialism glory. The
forests on the extreme left consist mostly of exotic trees, those at
the center are sholas and on the right are abandoned tea estates. Photo
by Sibi Arasu
All for a cup of tea and a piece of paper
Sky
islands are isolated mountain ecosystems that are radically different
from the lowlands surrounding them. Because of their isolation, sky
islands act as hotbeds of evolution, harbouring unique species found
nowhere else in the world. In addition to their biodiversity, sky
islands provide ecosystem services like water catchment for nearby
communities.
“The high altitude forests of the Nilgiris are some
of the few sky islands in the Indian subcontinent,” said Godwin Vasanth
Bosco, a naturalist based in Ooty, the largest town in the district. To
help preserve the components of this vanishing ecosystem, Bosco has
been collecting and nurturing native shola and grassland plant species
for the last three years. “The Nilgiris’ unique characteristics are also its downfall,” he told Mongabay.”While
the shola, which are dense forests, grow only in mountain folds, the
district was also home to hundreds of kilometres of high-altitude
grasslands. The biodiversity value of the grasslands is invaluable but
that is of little concern when they are also easy to clear off and setup
tea estates or plantations of commercial timber.” Tea plantations
alone currently cover more than 600 square kilometers of the district,
generating more than 135 million kilograms of tea in an average year,
according to the Indian Tea Association. Nilgiris tea is also among the
most expensive in the world. A high-grade variety of tea produced here
once fetched a world record price of $600 per kilogram at a tea auction
in Las Vegas in 2006. The
shola native species magnolia nilagirica at a reforestation site. The
remnants of what was once a tea factory can be seen in the background.
Photo by Sibi ArasuTimber plantations were also
once prominent in the region. Starting around 1840, plantations of
acacia, eucalyptus, and other commercially valuable tree species were
established by the British, with those in the Nilgiri plateau considered
among the most productive in the world.
Between 1950 to 1990,
the Indian Forest Department also planted a large number of these trees
in the grassland region of the Nilgiris to satisfy the various needs of a
growing economy – tanning bark for the leather industry, wood pulp for
the paper industry – as well as to satisfy an increasing demand for
firewood. According to Farshid S Ahrestani,
a wildlife ecologist, over 11,000 hectares (110 sq km) of grassland
across Tamil Nadu had been converted to tree plantations by 1988.
“We
shouldn’t forget though that during the British era and also
post-independence, it was us who planted these trees for livelihood and
commercial purposes,” Badrasamy told Mongabay. “These trees were a requirement then but have now become an environmental hazard.” These
ecological concerns prompted the forest department to cease timber
production in the 1990s. But rather than disappearing from the
landscape, the acacia and other commercial trees have invaded nearby
forests. Because they grow fast, they easily out compete native species;
grasslands in particular are readily displaced. However, Bosco believes native species could recolonise the land – if given a hand by conservationists. “This
is what we’re trying to do,” he said.”If we provide a safe environment
for the grasslands and the sholas to develop, after six months to a
year, they will be able to take care of themselves. These are still
early stages though and while reforesting sholas has had relatively more
success, bringing back grasslands is proving to be a tough task.
Constant invasion by non-native weeds being only one among many
problems.
Why reforest?
The
entire district of Nilgiris falls within a biodiversity hotspot, and is
home to a plethora of wildlife – including many species found nowhere
else in the world.
The Nilgiris’ shola forests are home to trees
endemic to the region such as the mohonia, rhodomyrtus, Nilgiri champak
and mountain navals, as well as unique grass species. Mammals include
the Nilgiri tahrs, Nilgiri langurs, Nilgiri martens, Indian bison,
civets and Bengal tigers; more than 350 bird species have been recorded
in the district. A
demolished tea factory at Cinchona overlooks abandoned tea estates that
are set to soon become 50 acres of reforested native shola forest and
grasslands. Photo by Sibi ArasuAs with the rest of the Western Ghats, the Nilgiris is a herpetological heavyweight, with several endemic frog species.
“There
is an abundance of endemic species in the Nilgiris and the Western
Ghats in general,” said Sathyabhama Das Biju, one of India’s foremost
herpetologists. “In the past few decades alone, more than 80 new
amphibians have been discovered in the Western Ghats.” The
Nilgiris’ known amphibians include the Ghats wart frog (Fejervarya
murthii), the Nilgiri montane tree frog (Ghatixalus variabilis), the
Nilgiri bush frog (Raorchestes tinniens), the Nilgiri cricket frog
(Fejervarya nilagirica) and the Nilgiri tropical frog (Micrixalus
phyllophilus). Of these, all are endangered with the exception of the
Nilgiri tropical frog, which is considered Vulnerable by the IUCN Red
List.
The Ghats wart frog is of particular conservation concern.
Listed as Critically Endangered by the IUCN, the frog’s main threat is
agricultural conversion of its montane forest habitat. Satellite imagery
and data from the University of Maryland show much of its range has
already been converted, with large spots of relatively recent tree cover
loss in what forest remains. The data indicate tree cover loss in the
frog’s habitat over the past 15 years has been double that for the
Nilgiris district as a whole. A common Indian toad (Duttaphrynus melanostictus) at the EBR site. Photo by Sibi ArasuHabitat
loss is not just a threat in the Nilgiris. Conversion of forest is
putting the pressure on amphibians and other animals and plants
throughout the Western Ghats.
“In the [Western Ghats] the most major threat to amphibian life is habitat loss,” Biju told Mongabay. “More than 80% of their habitat is lost or moving towards being lost and being fragmented.” In
addition to the wildlife they supports, native Nilgiris forests provide
important ecosystem services for surrounding communities.
“Even
an acre of native forests, if successfully brought back can make a huge
difference in the amount of water available for human habitation around
and below the forest,” said Anita Verghese, deputy director at the
Keystone Foundation, an organisation that has been working with
indigenous communities in the Nilgiris and surrounding districts since
1993. The
Alliance for Zero Extinction maps the known ranges of endangered,
endemic species around the world. Its plot of the distribution of the
critically endangered Ghats wart frog shows tree cover loss is still
occurring in its habitat. In the Nilgiris overall, data from the
University of Maryland indicate the district lost about 1 percent of its
remaining tree cover between 2001 and 2014; the range of the Ghats wart
frog experienced twice that loss over the same time period. In addition
to hosting endemic amphibians, the Nilgiris is part of a Tx2 Tiger
Conservation Landscape, which means the region has the potential to
double wild tiger numbers by 2020 with proper management.“While
small efforts are encouraging, it is up to the department of forests to
take this forward on a large scale, since more than 50 percent of the
land is under their control,” Verghese told Mongabay.”There
also needs to be more awareness among the people here about why
reforestation is important and there should be efforts taken to
encourage more people to get involved.”
However, not all are in favour of a reforestation approach.
“I
completely understand that there are administrators, politicians etc
who are trying, rightfully trying for some kinds of development,” Biju
told Mongabay. “But destroying a forest and then planting trees
is not biodiversity. This whole conventional thinking of substituting
forests is wrong. It’s taken a forest millions of years of evolution to
reach its state now. After cutting that area and saying that some
companies need the area for mining and then if the companies then plant
1,000 saplings, that’s not the way for conservation. “My
suggestion is that if you are destroying the area, then it’s better to
leave the area after sometime, rather than artificial planting. Many
times, they plant the wrong trees at grasslands and so on and that
completely destroys everything.” Satellite
images of the Ghats wart frog’s range show much of its habitat has
already been converted to farmland. Imagery courtesy of Google Earth.
Recognition, removal, restoration
In
2014 the Madras High Court passed an order for the removal of
eucalyptus and acacia from Tamil Nadu’s portion of the Western Ghats.
The High Court in its order acknowledged that the overall environmental
impact of invasive exotics far exceeded their short-term economic
benefits.
However, implementation of the order by the state’s
forest department in the last few years has been has been beset by a
variety of problems such as limited funding for removal and
reforestation, lack of technical expertise and insufficient manpower.
“The removal of exotics and reforestation of native forests are still in an experimental stage,” forest officer Badrasamy told Mongabay.
“This is something that cannot and should not be done immediately.
Since being hasty about this might make the situation worse. The
bringing back of native forests is the need of the hour, but to do it on
a large scale is a herculean task to say the least.” At the
village of Cinchona near Doddabetta peak – the highest mountain in the
Nilgiris, rising 2,637 meters (8,980 feet) above sea level – naturalist
Godwin Vasanth Bosco has been replanting sholas and grasslands at a
decommissioned tea estate spread across 50 acres. Naturalist Godwin Vasanth Bosco, who is helping with the reforestation project at Cinchona. Photo by Sibi Arasu“Here, we are doing our best to maintain ideal conditions for the shola to come back,” Bosco told Mongabay.
“One common mistake is that sholas are also grown where grasslands are
supposed to be and this never works out well. We are learning from past
experiences and hope to bring back sholas where they used to be and
grasslands where they were once grasslands.” The team of 20 people
has met with success and after three years more than 30 different shola
species are showing signs of healthy development. “This one shrub
called [impatiens], we didn’t even plant it. After extensive weeding it
started growing on its own,” Bosco said.”That’s the thing about these
forests. All they need is a head start. They’ll take care of themselves
afterwards.”
No comments:
Post a Comment