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Amaravathi Dam

Dam on the Amaravathi River in India

Amaravathi Dam

Summary

Dam on the Amaravathi River in India

FieldValue
nameAmaravathi Dam
imageAmaravathi Dam.jpg
image_altView of Amaravathi dam
name_officialAmaravathi Dam
dam_crossesAmaravati River
res_nameAmaravathi Reservoir
locationAmaravathinagar in Indira Gandhi Wildlife Sanctuary, Udumalpet, Tirupur district, Tamil Nadu, India
opening1957
coordinates
location_mapIndia Tamil Nadu
location_map_altLocation of the dam within Tamil Nadu

The Amaravathi Dam is a dam constructed across the Amaravathi River. It is located at Amaravathinagar, 25 km south of Udumalpet on SH 17 in the Indira Gandhi Wildlife Sanctuary, Tirupur district in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The associated Amaravathi Reservoir is 9.31 km2 in area and 33.53 m deep. The dam was built primarily for irrigation and flood control and now also has four megawatts of electrical generating capacity installed. It is notable for the significant population of mugger crocodiles living in its reservoir and catchment basin.

History

The dam was built across the Amaravati River in 1957, during K Kamaraj's administration, about 25 km upstream and south of the Thirumoorthy Dam.

Tourism

There is a well laid-out park where one may climb steep steps on the dam to have a picturesque view north of the plains below and south to the Anaimalai Hills and Palni Hills above. Boating for tourists in the dam began on 14 January 2011.

Amaravathi Reservoir

| max-depth = 33.53 m Amaravathi Reservoir at Amaravathinagar, 25 km south on SH 17 from Udumalpet, is located in Indira Gandhi Wildlife Sanctuary and National Park in Tiruppur district, Tamil Nadu, India. The reservoir was created by the steep Amaravathi Dam built across the Amaravathi River.{{cite book | access-date = 2008-09-30

History of the Amaravathi reservoir

Amaravathi reservoir in amaravathi nagar

The dam was built in 1957 across the Amaravathi River about 25 km upstream and south from Thirumoorthy Dam. Capacity of the dam has shrunk 25% from 4 tmcft to 3 tmcft due to siltation. The dam was built primarily for irrigation and flood control. In 2005 - 2006 the state reported revenue from medium commercial irrigation from the Amaravathi Reservoir Project was Rs. 43,51,000. During 2003–04, the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board proposed to increase the dams utility by installing 4 MW capacity hydro-electric power station, which is now operating.

Fisheries

The non-indigenous tilapia fish was introduced here in the 1950s and subsequently this reservoir had highest fish yield in the state by the 1970s.{{cite book | access-date = 2008-09-30

The Fisheries Department has formed the Amaravathi Nagar Tribal Fishermen Cooperative Society to give tribals fishing rights in the Amaravathi Reservoir. In 2007, fifty tribals who reside at Karattupathi settlement, close to the reservoir, enrolled themselves as members of the society and eight of them have received a fishing licence.

Crocodiles

Crocodile Rearing Center

The largest wild breeding population of crocodiles in South India live in the reservoir, and in the Chinnar, Thennar and Pambar rivers that drain into it. These broad-snouted mugger crocodiles, also known as marsh crocodiles and Persian crocodiles, are the most common and widespread of the three species of crocodiles found in India. They eat fish, other reptiles, small and large mammals and are sometimes dangerous to humans. Their total wild population here is currently estimated to be 60 adults and 37 sub-adults. Other fish predators here include: Oriental small-clawed otters, Indian cormorants and Indian flap-shelled turtles.

The Amaravathi Sagar Crocodile Farm, established in 1976, the largest crocodile nursery in India, is 1 kilometre before the Amaravathy dam site. Many adult crocodiles have been reintroduced from here into the wild. Eggs are collected from wild nests along the perimeter of the reservoir to be hatched and reared at the farm. Many crocodiles of all sizes can be seen basking in the sun and suddenly making a stride or piled up on one another. There are now 98 crocodiles (25 male + 73 female) maintained in captivity here. Three Forest Department personnel manage and maintain the centre., Tamil Nadu Forest Dept, Amaravati Sagar Crocodile Farm http://www.forests.tn.nic.in/WildBiodiversity/amaravathy_croc.html , 2007

Visitor information

There is a well laid-out park where one may climb steep steps on the dam to have a picturesque view north of the plains below and south to the Anaimalai Hills and Palni Hills above. This place is being developed as a District Excursion Centre for tourism.

The park and crocodile farm are open every day from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

Travel by road From Coimbatore – via Pollachi and Udumalpet to Amaravathynagar is 96 km.

Accommodation is available for four persons, with advance reservation, at a forest rest house near the crocodile farm. Rent is Rs.150 per day for two persons per suite.

References

References

  1. [https://aizwaikcha.blogspot.com/2008/03/amaravathi-dam.html Photo of Park]
  2. (14 Jan 2011). "சுற்றுலாப் படகு போக்குவரத்து துவக்கம்". Dina Mani.
  3. [http://www.tn.gov.in/economy/eco-aug2001-4.htm Government of Tamil Nadu, Reservoir Position]
  4. "Farmers worried over low water level" Gunasekaran M., The Hindu, 16 February 2007 [https://web.archive.org/web/20070217062322/http://www.hindu.com/2007/02/16/stories/2007021601150200.htm]
  5. [http://www.tn.gov.in/tnbudget/revenue%20receipts/revenue_summary.pdf Tamil Nadu Budget Summary, 2005 -2006]
  6. Tamil Nadu State Planning Commission, Annual Plan, Chapter 11 Infrastructure Development & Tourism, 2004 [http://www.tn.gov.in/spc/annualplan/chapter11-1.htm]
  7. Gopalakrishnan, V. Ph.D., "Ethical, Legal and Social Issues Facing Capture Fisheries", Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics 10 (2000), 77-81.[http://www.eubios.info/EJ103/EJ103E.htm]
  8. M. Gunasekaran
  9. Sreenivasan, A., 1972. ''Energy transformations through primary productivity and fish production in some tropical freshwater impoundments and ponds.'' Pages 505–514 in Z. Kajak and A. Hillbricht-Ilkowska (editors) : Productivity problems in freshwaters. Polish Scientific Publishers, Warsaw, Poland. referred to in:''Ecological Studies in Tropical Fish Communities'' By Ro McConnell, R. H. Lowe-McConnell, Cambridge University Press, 1987, p.277, {{ISBN. 0-521-28064-8, {{ISBN
  10. M. Gunasekaran, The Hindu, ''Coop. society for tribal fishermen formed'', 2007-12-25 [https://web.archive.org/web/20071228090400/http://www.hindu.com/2007/12/25/stories/2007122553270300.htm]
  11. Andrews
  12. Andrews, Harry V., ''Status and Distribution of the Mugger Crocodile in Tamil Nadu'' [https://archive.today/20041220055759/http://www.wii.gov.in/envis/crocodile/tnadu.htm]
  13. [http://www.coimbatore.com/pollachi/around.htm Around Pollachi- Anamalai Wildlife Sanctuary]
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