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Protecting the quiet ecologies

No matter how hard it becomes for industries to acquire land, with the new legislation in place the fact remains it may still be a terrible blow to the ecology if they do get some land. Consider two rich bird habitats, one untouched and the other, nearly gone.

Updated on: Sep 02, 2013 12:01 AM IST
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No matter how hard it becomes for industries to acquire land, with the new legislation in place the fact remains it may still be a terrible blow to the ecology if they do get some land. Consider two rich bird habitats, one untouched and the other, nearly gone.

HT Image
HT Image

About 10 kilometres away from the bird sanctuary of Sultanpur, is a stunning Basai village, with green fields, wetlands and in season, spectacular birds -from Painted Snipes to Golden Pacific Plovers.

In the last few years, the fields have been hemmed in by new multistoried constructions.

The fields have been sold. Such building will expand, and the wetlands will be lost. There is simply no value placed on the ecosystem, and its importance to life.

Luckier, till now, is the lovely village of Sonkhalia, near Ajmer. Every monsoon, the shy Lesser Floricans breed here. Birders travel from as far as Bangalore and Mumbai to see the famous ‘jump’ of the male Florican, a leap up to a few feet, above the jowar fields it typically hides in.

Solutions should be on a case-to-case basis and farmers should not be deprived. We need incentives for farmers and other landowners to not sell an important habitat.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bharati Chaturvedi

Bharati Chaturvedi is an environmentalist and writer. She is the founder and director of Chintan Environmental Research and Action Group.

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