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Week-long celebration in Odisha as crocodile conservation turns 50
Week-long celebration in Odisha as crocodile conservation turns 50

New Indian Express

time5 days ago

  • General
  • New Indian Express

Week-long celebration in Odisha as crocodile conservation turns 50

KENDRAPARA: Come Tuesday, Odisha will commemorate 50 years of its pioneering crocodile conservation projects on World Crocodile Day. In 1975, three conservation projects were launched in the state for as many species - salt-water crocodiles in Bhitarkanika, gharials in Satkosia and muggar in Similipal. These initiatives have gone on to transform reptile conservation in the country. 'The main objective of the crocodile conservation project was to protect their natural habitats and rebuild the population quickly through captive breeding,' said Dr Sudhakar Kar, noted herpetologist and former wildlife researcher of the Forest department. Over five decades, these initiatives have become one of India's most successful wildlife conservation programmes. 'We are happy for the success for which Forest department has decided to celebrate 50th anniversary of Crocodile Conservation Project in the state on June 17 by organising week-long meetings, seminars, workshops, photo exhibitions, quiz and painting competitions,' said principal chief conservator of forests (PCCF), wildlife Prem Kumar Jha. Dr Kar began saltwater crocodile breeding and rearing work in Bhitarkanika in 1975 alongside noted Australian herpetologist Dr H R Bustard. He is continuing his pioneering work even 13 years after retirement. Expressing concern over the increasing human-crocodile conflict in Bhitarkanika, he said forest officials have warned riverside villagers not to venture into creeks and rivers and erected barricades at several ghats to prevent attacks. As per the latest census report, Satkosia gorge is home to 16 gharials, 1,826 salt-water crocodiles reside in Bhitarkanika National Park and around 300 muggers live in the rivers of the state.

Odisha to seek MoEFCC clearance on Deomali eco-tourism project
Odisha to seek MoEFCC clearance on Deomali eco-tourism project

New Indian Express

time23-05-2025

  • Politics
  • New Indian Express

Odisha to seek MoEFCC clearance on Deomali eco-tourism project

BHUBANESWAR : The state government is working to get clearance of the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) on Deomali eco-tourism project within three months as ordered by the National Green Tribunal (NGT), sources in the Forest department said. As an alternative option, it is also considering to go for appeal against the tribunal order. PCCF (wildlife) and chief wildlife warden Prem Kumar Jha said the department is going through the details of the NGT order. 'As we have been granted three months time, a decision permissible under law will be taken soon to comply with the order within the timeline,' Jha informed. The NGT recently asked the state government to get clearance from the Centre for the structure under Forest (Conservation) Act within three months or demolish them and restore the land to its original form. The NGT's Eastern Zone bench of Justice B Amit Sthalekar (Judicial member) and Arun Kumar Verma (Expert member) had held that constructions made under the guise of eco-tourism development violated forest conservation norms and lacked requisite permissions.

29 gharial hatchlings found on Mahanadi sandbar in Satkosia
29 gharial hatchlings found on Mahanadi sandbar in Satkosia

Time of India

time19-05-2025

  • General
  • Time of India

29 gharial hatchlings found on Mahanadi sandbar in Satkosia

Bhubaneswar: In a cheer for wildlife lovers, officials of the wildlife wing on Monday discovered 29 hatchlings of the endangered gharial on a sandbar in the Mahanadi gorge in . This is the fifth consecutive year the forest department reported natural breeding of gharials at the same nesting ground. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now "To avoid any kind of disturbance during nesting, nobody has been allowed to venture into the gorge. After four days, we will be able to observe them directly. This time also, it is the same nesting site at Balabadamara under Tikarpada range," said divisional forest officer (Satkosia), Saroj Panda. Usually, the nesting occurs between March and May every year, but the survival rate of is 0.1%, the same as that of Olive Ridley sea turtles, officials said. In Feb, the gharial census revealed the numbers in the wild increased by two compared to last year, reaching 16 in the Mahanadi gorge. Satkosia is the only place in the state where gharials breed in the wild. It also houses a (Gracu). In Jan last year, Nandankanan zoo, which is involved in Satkosia's gharial recovery programme, extended the four-year planned breeding project by another three years after a year's gap. The four-year project was from 2019 to 2022. "It is an indication of improvement in habitat that gharials increased by two in the wild. This time also, breeding was successful. Gharials are sensitive aquatic animals, and their survival rate in the wild is very low," said chief wildlife warden Prem Kumar Jha.

Turtle tagged with device reaches AP coast
Turtle tagged with device reaches AP coast

Hans India

time19-05-2025

  • General
  • Hans India

Turtle tagged with device reaches AP coast

Kendrapara: An Olive Ridley turtle, which was earlier tagged with a satellite-linked tracking device at Gahirmatha beach in Kendrapara district, has travelled around 1,000 km in the sea in 51 days to reach the Andhra Pradesh coast, an official said. The turtle traversed the waters of Sri Lanka, Puducherry and Tamil Nadu before reaching the coast of the neighbouring Andhra Pradesh, he said. 'The turtle navigated through the sea waters of Sri Lanka, Tamil Nadu and Puducherry, and reached the Andhra Pradesh coast in 51 days. It covered around 1,000 km,' the official said. The latest satellite tracking map of the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) has located one of the tagged turtles moving in the sea waters in Andhra Pradesh, and found that it has navigated around 1,000 km, said Principal Chief Conservator of Forest (PCCF) Prem Kumar Jha. A turtle, tagged with a tracking device in Odisha four years back, had earlier covered 3,500 km to lay eggs at a beach in Ratnagiri district of Maharashtra recently. The Olive Ridley turtles turn up in millions for mass nesting along the Odisha coast every year. Gahirmatha beach, off the Bay of Bengal, in Kendrapara district is acclaimed as the world's largest known nesting ground of these marine species. The aquatic animals also turn up at the Rushikulya river mouth in Ganjam district and the Devi river mouth in Puri for mass nesting. According to officials, around 3,000 turtles are tagged with a tracking device annually. Experts believed that at least 1 lakh turtles are required to be tagged for obtaining better information on their reproductive biology, movements and growth rates, migratory route and areas of foraging. The Odisha Forest department had taken up the tagging exercise in 1999, and at least two tagged turtles then were sighted on the Sri Lanka coast. Later, the tagging exercise was suspended, and the Zoological Survey of India (ZSI) resumed the exercise in 2021. Between 2021 and 2024, around 12,000 turtles were tagged in Gahirmatha and Rushikulya river mouth nesting grounds, the officials said.

Process to notify Debrigarh as tiger reserve begins with formation of expert panel
Process to notify Debrigarh as tiger reserve begins with formation of expert panel

Time of India

time04-05-2025

  • General
  • Time of India

Process to notify Debrigarh as tiger reserve begins with formation of expert panel

1 2 Bhubaneswar: Three years after the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) approved tiger reserve status for Debrigarh Wildlife Sanctuary, the wildlife wing has formed a three-member expert committee to carry out ground assessment. The panel will conduct field study once it receives approval from state govt. After the expert committee report is submitted and govt notification issued, Debrigarh will become Odisha's third tiger reserve after Satkosia, which was declared in 2007, officials said. "The expert committee will start working once the govt gives the go-ahead. Within two to three weeks, their reports will be ready, after which the govt will decide when to notify the tiger reserve," said chief wildlife warden Prem Kumar Jha. Once the reserve is notified, tiger habitat management will undergo a huge change. NTCA's approval came at the end of Jan, two months after a Royal Bengal Tiger walked into Debrigarh, which had no big cat. Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Google Brain Co-Founder Andrew Ng, Recommends: Read These 5 Books And Turn Your Life Around Blinkist: Andrew Ng's Reading List Undo "After the notification, it will be the first tiger reserve in western Odisha. The reserve, as per NTCA's recommendation, will have a total area of 804 sq km with a sanctuary area of 353 sq km without human habitation as the core. Inside the core area, there is no revenue village," a wildlife officer said. Wildlife officials said one of the primary benefits of Debrigarh getting tiger reserve status is strengthening biodiversity and better carbon sequestration. "The other benefits are boost to the local economy of three districts by increasing employment prospects and the inflow of foreign exchange through increase in tourists, apart from other advantages," the officer added. Sources said seven tiger reserves in India have a core area below 300 sq km, but Debrigarh has 353 sq km. Considering Debrigarh positioning itself at an advantage in terms of water sources and prey density, NTCA recommended prey supplementation (translocation) that can, in the long run, help sustain big cats. Officials said the state govt will conduct gram sabhas in 54 buffer villages for the declaration of Debrigarh Tiger Reserve . Debrigarh authorities said the sanctuary bears a unique distinction as it is located at the junction of central and eastern India forests, with three sanctuaries — Achanakmar and Udanti in Chhattisgarh and Kanha in Madhya Pradesh — having contiguity with each other. Kawal Tiger Reserve in Telangana also has contiguity with Debrigarh. In Odisha, Satkosia Tiger Reserve and Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary are also connected. Debrigarh authorities have relocated 445 families from the core area, making it inviolate.

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