Posted by
Susan Sharma
on
May 10, 2006
Hi Harshad,
I found this message in yahoo group "Naturepix" which will interest you.
jugal tiwari jugalt2000@yahoo.com wrote: Mount Abu in India is a great place for Reptiles. Atleast 16 species of Snakes are here (I have in my photo collection). The great work of Reptile rescue is being done by
Kiran Chavda, Shailesh patel and the team. This forsten's cat snake is a rarity in Mount Abu. There are only 4-5 rescues from residential areas in 18 years time. They live in pairs, this one was rescued by Shailesh patel from the St. Mary School building.
Jugal Tiwari 09414026156
Message from Yahoo group Naturepix message No. 6606
You can read the message at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/naturepix/messages/6602?viscount=-100
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Posted by
aditya
on
May 06, 2006
Peb fort near Matheran is a treat for bird watcher and herpetologist. I visited this fort last Sunday. It was a very harsh treck due to summer heat. On peb fort there were many caves some of them are natural and some of them are man made. in these caves
there were many gekos such as
1]Rock geko : Hemidactlylus maculatus.
2]Ground geko: Gekoella sp.
3] Bark geko:hemidactlyus leschenaltii.
We also get some snake Species such as
1] rat snake
2] Indian krait: in cave
3] Indian cobra:
At the base of fort a lot of bird species listed there. I watched 42 species in single treck. special achievement of treck is locating two nests of crested serpent eagle. it was an amazing treck. for more details e mail me on
adi_sawant@rediffmail.com
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Posted by
Harshad V Kulkarni
on
May 04, 2006
One of the beautiful Indian snakes is Forstein's Cat snake. According to the reference in The Book of Indian Reptiles & Amphibians by J.C.Danial(BNHS),this snake is found in forests of western ghats and in Assam.
But last year we found two females of these species with one male too. The sizes were 4'9" ,4'8" and 5'2" respectively.
I hope that this will be a great finding.
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Posted by
Susan Sharma
on
March 01, 2006
The renowned biologist A.J.T Johnsingh suggests that the forests of Uttaranchal can easily support about 1000 elephants and 200 tigers
as long as this large habitat, now fragmented in three blocks is managed and protected as one continuous habitat for wildlife.
We have uploaded his report " A Road Map for Conservation in Uttaranchal" at the following link
http://www.indianwildlifeclub.com/ResearchPapers/Conservation-Uttaranchal.pdf
Since this is a pdf file, downloading will take some time. But I can assure you it is well worth the wait. Mr. Johnsingh is an academic who is well versed with grassroot level realities and I have heard him passionately pleading the cause of
conservation - repeatedly stressing the need for field level awareness before taking up conservation issues.
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Posted by
Susan Sharma
on
November 25, 2005
"It is a much-ignored reality that tens of millions of people in India still survive on the biodiversity of forests, seas, wetlands, grasslands, mountains and coasts. The true value of these ecosystems and the species of plants and animals they contain is
not reflected anywhere in parameters of development like Gross National Product."
It is unfortunate that the National Bio-Diversity Action Plan drawn up by the Ministry of Environment and Forests with the assistance of Kalpavriksh, an NGO and Biotech Consortium India Ltd, is creating controversies and delaying the much
needed action.
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Posted by
Susan Sharma
on
November 25, 2005
India is one of the twelve megadiverse countries in the world.
Bio diversity is important for sustainable development because it represents the wealth of biological resources available to us and for future generations for food, clothing, medicine and housing. Polluted waters, deforestation and green house gases are
threatening our biodiversity.
Environmental initiatives by individuals and groups like us, however small, will help in keeping our bio-diversity at the centre of developmental projects.
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Posted by
Susan Sharma
on
November 10, 2005
The total forest cover in India is estimated to be 19.27 per cent of India's geographic area.
This area accounts for our bio-diversity, our natural wilderness heritage.
Is bio-diversity an end by itself or a mere tool for obtaining tourist revenues?
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