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Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary

Wildlife sanctuary in South India

Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary

Summary

Wildlife sanctuary in South India

FieldValue
nameChinnar Wildlife Sanctuary
iucn_categoryIV
photoChinnar Wildlife Sanctuary.jpg
mapIndia Kerala#India
relief1
mapframeYes
locationKerala, India
coordinates
establishedAugust 1984
area_km290.44
elevation2372

Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary is a wildlife sanctuary in the Idukki district of India's Kerala state. It is one of 18 wildlife sanctuaries among the protected areas of Kerala. It hosts the only rehabilitation centre for the Indian star tortoise in India.

It is under the jurisdiction of and contiguous with Eravikulam National Park to the south. Indira Gandhi National Park is to the north and Palani Hills National Park is to the east. It forms an integral part of the 1187 km2 block of protected forests straddling the Kerala-Tamil Nadu border in the Anaimalai Hills. The Western Ghats, Anamalai Sub-Cluster, including all of Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary, is under consideration by the UNESCO World Heritage Committee for selection as a World Heritage Site.

Geography

Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary is located between latitude 10º15' - 10º21' N and longitude 77º5' - 77º16' E. The Munnar – Udumalpet road SH 17 passes through the sanctuary for 16 km and divides it into nearly equal portions. Average annual rainfall is only 500 mm, spread over about 48 days, because it is in the rain shadow region of the southern Western Ghats.

The elevation ranges from 400 m at east end of the Chinnar River to 2522 m at Kumarikkal Mala peak. Other major peaks in the sanctuary are Nandala Malai 2372 m, Kottakombu malai (2144 m), Vellaikal malai (1863 m) and Viriyoottu malai 1845 m. In contrast, Anamudi peak 2695 m, located 23 km away in the adjacent Eravikulam National Park, is the highest peak in South India.

Settlements and crops

There are 11 tribal settlements inside the Chinnar WLS, each is well demarcated by temporary stone walls. The main inhabitants are Muthuvas and Pulayars. Cultivation of maize, ragi and lemongrass is practiced in the settlements. The Mudhuvas carry out small scale ganja cultivation for their religious purposes.

Fauna

[[Albino gaur]] or ''Manjampatti white bison''. Albino gaur are very rare; this photograph was taken in Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary.

The sanctuary's fauna comprises:

  • 28 mammal species, including Indian leopard and spotted deer, Indian elephant, gaur, Bengal tiger, sambar deer, common langur, bonnet macaque, gray langur, Nilgiri tahr, rusty-spotted cat and grizzled giant squirrel;
  • 225 bird species including yellow-throated bulbul;
  • 52 reptile species including 29 species of snakes, Indian star tortoise and the largest population of mugger crocodiles in Kerala;
  • 14 fish species observed in the Chinnar and Pambar rivers include Garra mullya, river-carp baril, giant danio and the endangered hill stream game fish Deccan mahseer;
  • 15 amphibian species;
  • 156 species of butterflies. In 2016, 101 species of spiders were reported.

Flora

View of Chinnar montane rain forest

There are 963 species of flowering plants in the sanctuary. Ecoregions of the sanctuary comprise mostly grassland and wet grasslands vegetation and some South Western Ghats montane rain forests and high shola at the higher western elevations. South Western Ghats moist deciduous forests at mid elevations give way to dry deciduous forests and thorny scrub forests in the lower dryer eastern edges of the valley. The major xerophytic species in the thorny scrub forests are Acacia arabica, Acacia leucofolia, Acacia concinna, Prosporis juliflora, and Opuntia stricta.

The Marayoor sandalwood forest is located here.

Regional cooperation

Senior officials of the Ministry of Environment and Forests (India), Principal Chief Conservators of Forests of Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, together with other senior forest officials of these states and the Union Territory of Pondicherry, met at Thiruvananthapuram on 3 and 4 November 2006 and resolved several mutual issues concerning conservation and protection of forests and wildlife of the region.

A regular conference of the forest ministers and forest officials of the southern states is held once a year, in rotation in each state.CONFERENCE OF THE FOREST MINISTERS OF SOUTHERN STATES, THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, 3 – 4 November 2006 Forest Ministers Resolution

References

References

  1. Kerala Forests and Wildlife Department. (2004). "The Sanctuaries and National Parks in Kerala". Government of Kerala.
  2. Pereira, I.. (2017). "Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary hitches wagon to star tortoises". The Hindu.
  3. UNESCO, World Heritage sites, Tentative lists, Western Ghats sub cluster, Niligiris. retrieved 4/20/2007 [https://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/2103/]
  4. Centre for Environment & Development (2004) Forest Fire Forecasting in Western Ghats, India [https://web.archive.org/web/20070929002804/http://www.cedprojects.com/FF_Chinnar.htm Chinnar wildlife sanctuary]
  5. Eco-Informatics Centre, Conservation Database. "Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary". [[ATREE]].
  6. CED [https://web.archive.org/web/20070929002804/http://www.cedprojects.com/FF_Chinnar.htm Chinnar wildlife sanctuary]
  7. Adarsh, C. K.. (2016). "A preliminary checklist of spiders (Araneae: Arachnida) in Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary, Western Ghats, India". Journal of Threatened Taxa.
  8. The Kerala Forest Department. (2012). "Annexure - 4-10: Flora and Fauna Of Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary". Government of Kerala.
  9. Department of Forests and Wildlife. "Management Plan (2002-2011)". Government of Kerala.
  10. keralatourism.org, [http://www.keralatourism.org/index.php?source=desti&zone=1&destid=358 Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary]
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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