Habitat contiguity, the next course of action to protect the Nilgiri tahr

HomeCitiesHabitat contiguity, the next course of action to protect the Nilgiri tahr

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બારડોલી કેનાલમાં જળકુંભીના જમેલા સાથે કચરાના ઢગ

સિંચાઈ વિભાગની લાલિયાવાડીના કારણે બાબેનથી નાંદીડા સુધીની કેનાલમાં ગંદકીનું સામ્રાજ્યનહેરની સફાઈના નામે સરકારી રૂપિયાનો ધુમાડો છતાં કેનાલમાં જળકુંભીનો જમાવડો આ સમસ્યા ક્યારે ઉકલશે તે પણ...

The Nilgiri tahr population was once spread across the Nilgiris and the Western Ghats, with their range even extending into Karnataka.

The Nilgiri tahr population was once spread across the Nilgiris and the Western Ghats, with their range even extending into Karnataka.
| Photo Credit: M. SATHYAMOORTHY

With the Nilgiri tahr (Nilgiritragus hylocrius) populations stabilising and even increasing in parts of the Western Ghats over the last few decades due to better conservation practices, wildlife biologists and experts state that the next course of action in protecting the species was ensuring habitat contiguity so that disparate populations across their geographical range can inter-breed, ensuring genetic diversity.

In the centenary volume (1877-1977) of the Nilgiri Wildlife and Environment Association, E.R.C. Davidar writes that according to historical records, the Nilgiri tahr was once widespread in the Nilgiris and the Western Ghats, their range even extending into Karnataka. The Nilgiri tahr, which probably numbered in the tens of thousands two centuries ago, have declined to a little over 3,000 in field surveys carried out between 2007 and 2011, with many small populations going extinct.

However, due to intensive conservation practices, their numbers have increased since Davidar’s (1978) estimate of 2,230 individuals, said Priya Davidar, a renowned conservation biologist. She said only two populations in Eravikulam and the Nilgiris have a large number of individuals, with the rest being much smaller, often represented by a single herd. “There are documented extinctions of these small populations,” she said.

Conservation biologists, such as Davidar, argue that the future of the Nilgiri tahr was linked to genetics and climate change, arguing that for the species to continue to survive in the coming decades, ensuring habitat contiguity between areas where the animals are found will be pivotal in maintaining genetic variability. “Genetic studies by Luis et al. (2016) indicate low levels of genetic variation across the Western Ghats populations, which increases their risk of extinction. The paper, Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of Nilgiri Tahr across the Western Ghats, which analysed 191 faecal samples from 100 tahr from across their distribution range in Kerala and Tamil Nadu states that, “The single largest Nilgiri tahr population (approx. 700 individuals) in the Eravikulam National Park also incidentally has the highest genetic diversity.”

Genetic variation

“Genetic variation increases with population size, and the Nilgiri tahr has to be maintained in large, connected populations to decrease its risk of extinction. As many populations in the Western Ghats are small and isolated, it is subject to genetic drift and inbreeding. Genetic drift is a process by which small isolated populations lose genes due to random factors, and mating with relatives increases inbreeding, which adversely affects the survival of individuals,” Ms. Davidar said. A more recent paper in 2023 (Kanagaraj et al.) also predicts that the tahr could lose 55.5% of its habitat by 2070 due to climate change, causing an increased risk of extinction. “Habitat contiguity also provides opportunities for the Tahr to move to more suitable habitats under the scenario of human caused habitat loss and climate change,” argue experts.

However, other researchers believe that while in-breeding in isolated populations could be a matter of concern, that manifestations of genetic in-breeding depressions was not evident in Nilgiri tahr populations so far. “In the 1980s, a few individual animals from the Thiruvananthapuram Zoo were taken to the United States (U.S.) and were bred in captivity, with a few individuals also making their way into private ownership. In 2017, the descendants of this small population, were still alive and, seemingly, thriving in captivity, indicating that in-breeding may not be an immediate threat to the species,” said M.A. Predit, the associate co-ordinator for the Nilgiri Tahr Project, WWF-India.

Mr. Predit said of more immediate concern were anthropogenic pressures and communicable diseases, which he believes has wiped out populations in Megamalai and Vengoli in Parambikulam. “It could be that lack of genetic diversity could lead to individuals and herds being more at risk from communicable diseases such as foot-and-mouth disease but there needs to be further studies to come to this conclusion,” he said. He added that while ensuring genetic flow between populations of the tahr was important, that this could also increase the risk of communicable diseases spreading throughout the population.

Determining factors

Jean-Philippe Puyravaud, a landscape ecologist from the Sigur Nature Trust, said the two factors that dictated the future of a species was the number of individuals of the largest population and their genetic diversity. “On both counts, the Nilgiri tahr is faring very poorly. The idea that the species is doing better because the numbers are increasing is a marginal improvement. What should happen is promoting larger populations with better connectivity between them, where two or more isolated populations become one larger herd, which also increases their genetic diversity,” he said.

M.G. Ganesan, Project Director of the government’s Project Nilgiri Tahr, said while concern over improving the genetic variability of the species were valid, the task was challenging due to the “complicated” topography and habitats occupied currently by the animal. “What we are looking at is habitat modification, such as removing invasive species and improving grasslands, that could allow tahr to move between habitats,” he said. He added that the Advanced Institute for Wildlife Conservation was looking into these aspects, adding that tahr were already recolonising certain habitats,, especially in the Nilgiris and Kanniyakumari.



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