*Developing Sahyadris and Eating it too*

 "Even if imagination were a horse it would be impossible for it to move in
these parts. It is extremely difficult for this region to be conquered. It
is full of hill ranges and deep gorges. I am blessed with divine favour. An
invader of these lands, whosoever he may be, has never succeeded," in a
letter to the Mogul officials wrote Shivaji in the midst of his successful
battle against the Mogul Empire in the north and that of Bijapur kingdom in
the south. He was referring to the Sahyadris, the elder brother of
Himalayas, not knowing that Western Ghats Development Programme would prove
him wrong.

 Spectators like Planning Commission who delineated overarching ideology of
development also designated the Sahyadris as the Western Ghats development
region and turned it into a spectacle vanquished by the developers for good.
Be it Maharashtra, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Goa, the objective of
the developers is to make the economic well being of the population in the
Sahyadris and exploitation of the resources of the hilly region as its only
focus. As an afterthought it has been rationalized by making right sounding
noises about balance between beneficiary oriented and infrastructural
development schemes, keeping in view the vital importance of ecological
restoration and conservation.

Amid official and unofficial "conservation efforts" and attempts to draw a
fine balance between the ideology of development as a national security
need, the biodiversity of the Sahyadris, one of the eight biodiversity
hotspots in the world, is degrading fast, one can hear the resonance of what
University Education Commission of 1948 had noted. On the defects of
exclusively scientific and technical education, it said, "Now that
scientific, discoveries and technological applications have altered our
physical environment profoundly in the space of a few generations, our
social habits and institutions require to be readjusted. We have grown
strong in the mastery of the physical world but are very weak in our ability
to manage and direct the social forces that shape our lives. It is a false
belief that scientific pre-eminence is the only basis- of national security
and welfare."

Since 1980 more than 200 species are believed to have gone extinct largely
due to misplaced human intervention. Now that the 12 species of frogs have
been identified following a revision of the Philautus genus and are a result
of ten years of field study in Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka. Goa,
Maharashtra, and parts of Gujarat, in the Sahyadris, introspection on the
part of policy makers and developers is called for. This finding includes a
rediscovery of a 'lost species', the Travancore bushfrog which was thought
to be extinct. Herpetologists and researchers in the amphibian community
warn that the surveys reveal threats to frogs, namely habitat loss to
urbanization and plantations. Seven of the 12 new species were only found in
unprotected areas. This has been published in latest issue of Zoological
Journal of Linnean Society, London.

 Underlining its rich biodiversity Sahyadris mediate the rainfall regime of
peninsular India by intercepting the southwestern monsoon winds. The wide
variation of rainfall patterns in the Sahyadris, coupled with the region's
complex geography, produces a great variety of vegetation types. These
include scrub forests in the low-lying rainshadow areas and the plains,
deciduous and tropical rainforests up to about 1,500 meters, and a unique
mosaic of montane forests and rolling grasslands above 1,500 meters.
Kalsubai, Mahabaleshwar, Harishchandragarh, Kudremukh, and Anamudi are the
main peaks in the Sahyadris. Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri and their tributaries
are the perennial rivers of the Sahyadris that flow into the Bay of Bengal.

Interestingly, Sahyadri hills of southwestern India and the highlands of
southwestern Sri Lanka although separated by 400 kilometers, are strikingly
similar in their geology, climate and evolutionary history although Sri
Lanka is a continental island separated from southern India by the
20-meter-deep Palk Strait.

Oblivious of such ecologically diverse but fragile zones wherein these
species inhabit, fulfilment of the Planning Commission's objective of
"exploitation" for economic well-being remains the litmus test of
patriotism. The ongoing loss of dense forest cover, ecological destruction,
mining at any cost, emergence of questionable, unreliable and confidential
wildlife census data and the landlordism of forest department seem to
represent a tendency wherein an animal called developer begins to eat its
own flesh for its own and for some supposed greater common good.
 Even as sponsored destruction Sahyadris is underway, new discoveries of
previously unknown species made in the forests amid the increasing
vulnerability to extinction of more and more species must set the alarm bell
ringing.
.
-- 
Gopal Krishna
New Delhi
Mb: 9818089660
E-mail: [email protected]
Blog: toxicswatch.blogspot.com

 "If societies are serious about helping the poorest of the poor, they
should stop investing in microcredit and start supporting large
labour-intensive industries.'
Aneel Karnani, Stanford Social Innovation Review

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