PROTECTED AREA UPDATE
No. 36 & 37 June 2002
News and Information from protected areas in India and South Asia
EDITORIAL
NEWS FROM INDIAN STATES
ASSAM
Team studies feasibility to translocate Kaziranga rhinos
NGOs call to save Kaziranga from encroachments
Wildlife rescue centre at Kaziranga
Elephant, cattle treatment camp at Orang, Nameri
Rhino poached in Pobitara, poachers electrocuted
Elephant treatment camp at Orang
Apathy, encroachments
threaten Deepor Beel
BIHAR
SC directs state to pay
staff of Valmiki TR
DELHI
Bird sanctuary proposed for
Wazirabad
GOA
20 turtle hatcheries set up
at Agonda
GUJARAT
Car rally through Wild Ass Sanctuary prevented
Fire in Gir
Wells around Gir threaten
wildlife
HARYANA
Wild animal census in state
New sanctuary in Morni; two
others denotified
HIMACHAL PRADESH
MoEF stops road projects
through Kalatop-Khajjar WLS
J&K
J&K to launch Project
Hangul
JHARKHAND
World Bank survey for Forestry Project
Two elephant deaths in
Palamau
KARNATAKA
Elephant census in South India
3 research projects planned in Nagarhole
Forest fires in Nagarhole
Ecotoursim resort near Dandeli
Irpu project to affect Brahmagiri WLS
Butterfly park in Bannerghata
Bandipur closed due to fire threat
Illegal quarrying near
Ranganthitu stopped
KERALA
Fire in Periyar
SC allows transfer of
petitions in Mullaperiyar case
MADHYA PRADESH
Proposals for full / partial denotification of PAs
Simha Mitra awards for Kuno
staff, villagers
MAHARASHTRA
Forests being opened up for eco-tourism
Study committees set up for Mahabaleshwar Eco-Sensitive zone
Matheran declared as eco-sensitive zone
Population rise in wildlife in Western Ghat sanctuaries
Leopard attacks on the rise around Sanjay Gandhi NP
Kolhapur Forest Division gets Rs. 2.16 crores
10 yr. Management plan for
Radhanagari, Sagareshwar and Chandoli sanctuaries
MANIPUR
Poachers caught in Loktak
MEGHALAYA
No elephant census due to
funds paucity
MIZORAM
LPG for villages around
Dampa Tiger Reserve
NAGALAND
Village declares itself a
no-hunting zone
ORISSA
Prawn gheries in Bhitarkanika to be demolished
Villagers to protect mangroves in, around Bhitarkanika
Tourism boom killing Chilka dolphins
Mining threat to Kuldiha WLS
CAG finds irregularity in functioning of Chilka Development Authority
Crocodile population up in Bhitarkanika
New sanctuary proposed in Barbara forests
Casuarina plantations ruin
turtle nesting sites on coast
PUNJAB
Ropar, Kanjli wetlands
declared Ramsar sites
TAMIL NADU
Eco-awareness programme at Koonthankulam Bird Sanctuary
NEERI to conduct eco study of Sethusamudran Project
Major fire in Mudumalai
Elephant falls in silted dam near Mudumalai; dies
Elephant population up in Anaimalai
Stray dogs, garbage, speeding vehicles threaten deer, blackbuck in Guindy NP
Training project for
managing elephant reserves
UTTARANCHAL
Trains' speed in Rajaji to be reduced
Train injures another elephant in Rajaji
Power line from Tehri to cut through Rajaji
Elephant electrocuted in Rajaji
SC asks for re-alignment plan for road through Corbett
Election official row in Corbett
Ivory haul in Uttaranchal
UTTAR PRADESH
US to fund Indo-Nepal corridor study
Tiger census based on DNA 'typing'
Rhinos migrate from Nepal
to Pilibhit Forests
WEST BENGAL
Farraka barrage creates new land in Sunderbans
Loudspeakers banned in Sunderbans
Tiger census in Sunderbans
Train kills another three elephants in North Bengal
Openbill storks in Raigunj Bird Sanctuary being killed for their eggs
NATIONAL NEWS FROM INDIA
6th National Consultation on Wildlife Conservation and People's Livelihood Rights
Four new areas proposed for Project Tiger
Web database on marine mammals strandings / sightings
Satellite system to detect forest fires
National Animal Mortality Database
SOUTH ASIA
UNDP project for Sunderbans in India & Bangladesh
BANGLADESH
Regional biodiversity workshop held in Sunderbans
NEPAL
Four nation clean up of Mt. Everest
103 new peaks opened for international climbing
Community based livestock insurance for snow leopard conservation in Annapurna
INTERNATIONAL
RSPB grants available for research
Manual for wildlife conservation in tropical Asia
OPPURTUNITIES
Community Mobiliser, Education coordinator for project in Sheopur, MP
WTI: Officer; Wild Policy And Wildlife Trade Control Programmes
ATREE: Positions for ecologically oriented social scientists/economists
WHAT'S AVAILABLE?
Customs and Conservation
ommunity Forestry
Biodiversity conservation in West Bengal
Mountain Protected Areas Update
The Environmental Activists' Handbook Vol II
Community Managed Forests: Law, Problems, Alternatives. (A Case Study of Meghalaya)
Wildlife Reserves of India
UPCOMING
New Journal: Conservation and Society
World Congress on Aquatic Protected Areas
2002 International Seminar on Protected Area Management
International Conference on Mountain Development
International Conference on problems in coastal regions
READER'S RESPONSES
EDITORIAL
Eco Sensitive Zones: What is the potential?
Two new areas in Maharashtra
have recently been declared as Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZ) under Section 3 (2) (v)
of the Environment Protection Act (EPA) -1986. The PA Update has reported the
developments regarding ESZs
regularly, including this time. It is no coincidence that the two areas so
declared, Mahabaleshwar and Matheran, are both important and popular tourist
resorts in the Western Ghats, have a substantial forest cover and support
good wildlife populations. At the same time these places like many other hill
resorts in the country are under severe threat from urbanisation, concretisation,
and unplanned, unbridled growth. If this is not checked or regulated in some
way, it will certainly and adversely impact those very attributes that make
these places so attractive in the first place. Is there then a viable solution,
to ensuring that these hill stations and their environments survive and that
business and livelihoods that thrive here are not affected too? It needs a
pragmatic outlook and approach and one that needs to address multiple
constituencies and stake holders. In this particular case, as in many similar
others, the EPA probably provides that framework for exactly this kind of
situation. Declaring an area an ESZ or an Eco Sensitive Area is an available
tool within the present legal and policy framework that has probably not been
used enough. It allows for looking at large areas, allows for a multiplicity of
human and economic activities to continue, but also allows for the restriction
and complete stoppage of the more drastic and severe problems faced by places
like Mahabaleshwar and Matheran. It is not a perfect tool, and just like any
other tool has its own respective limitations. However, it certainly offers a
space that can and should be used. And it can be pretty successful too, as has
been seen from another area in
Maharashtra, the Dahanu taluka which was declared a ESZ (its called Ecologically
Fragile Area here) in 1991. Activists and locals admit that protecting this area
under the EPA has played a very important role in keeping alive the green cover
here and importantly keeping away large scale industrial development that has
destroyed surrounding areas. Instrumental in ensuring this has been the work of
the Dahanu Taluka Environment Protection
Authority (DTEPA), that has the responsibility of the ESZ. Unfortunately now,
concerted efforts are being made to get the Authority desolved. This needs to be
opposed, and at the same time, efforts needed to be made to
increase this protective network.
These attempts are being made, the more notable ones being for a large ESZ
covering the western ghats in parts of Karnataka, Goa and Maharashtra and a more
recent order of the Supreme Court asking for the declaring the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands as an ESZ.
In the wildlife conservation context too, it is important to note that the ESZ
allows us to legally enforce sustainable land use over larger landscapes,
something that is not available within the provisions of the present Wildlife
Protection Act (WLPA). An ESZ can be used as a complimentary tool of
conservation along with protected areas. This infact, has even been included in
the Wildlife Conservation Strategy 2002 which suggests that lands falling within
10 km. of the boundaries of National Parks and Sanctuaries should be notified as
eco-fragile zones under provisions of the EPA. This could be a vital lifeline,
particularly for the areas buffering our protected areas and in protecting
important migratory corridors.
The ESZ is a valuable tool that we should try and use creatively and certainly
more extensively.
Kalpavriksh,
Apt. 5, Shri Dutta Krupa,
908 Deccan Gymkhana,
Pune 411004, India
Tel: 91 20 5654239
Fax: 91 20 5654239
Email: kvriksh@vsnl.com