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Showing posts with label sultanpur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sultanpur. Show all posts

Invasive Species: When green journalism turns yellow

By crying wolf over green issues, ill-informed journalists are indulging in yellow journalism. The recent scare-mongering by the national media over the "death" of the wetland bird sanctuary of Sultanpur is a case in point. 

Keoladeo Ghana park director Anoop KR holding an invasive Mangur catfish and the partially consumed leg of a bird retrieved from its digestive tract


Over the last two weeks the national media -- particularly Delhi-based newspapers and television channels -- have been beating their breasts and wailing about the imminent death of wetland ecosystems such as Bharatpur and Sultanpur (the former in Rajasthan, the latter in Haryana). Both these bird sanctuaries are canal-fed wetland ecosystems whose health and survival depend on riverine water inflow: Bharatpur is fed by a canal from the Bhima river, while Sultanpur depends on water channeled from the Gurgaon canal that diverts water from the Yamuna.


On June 16, The Hindustan Times reported that Sultanpur lake had dried up and that the future of the wetland sanctuary was imperiled. Excerpt:
As a grim reminder of the future, the bodies of two African Black fish, with their rotten yellow scales and broken bones, lie beside each other on the parched, cracked earth. Barely six feet away, the grey carrion of a Blue Bull (Neelgai), with its torso missing but tiny horn and moldy skin intact, engages the attention of a solitary crow.
At first read, this comes across as serious reportage of an environmental disaster. In truth, it is just theatre of the verbose. HT quoted Minister for Environment and Forests Jairam Ramesh, well known for his love of expressing opinion that he has not had time to adequately consider, as writing in an open letter to Haryana Chief Minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda: “You are well aware of the history of the park and the role that Indira Gandhi played in having it declared as a sanctuary way back in 1972. It is doubly unfortunate that a sanctuary with Gandhi’s name is so closely associated should find itself in such a pathetic state.” 


Spoken like a true Congress loyalist. Except that since the sanctuary was notified, nobody in the great party has spared a thought for it. Except perhaps another Gandhi that the Congress doesn't quite favour. Maneka Gandhi, the outlawed daughter-in-law of the first family, was briefly associated in the media with Sultanpur but not in a way that any birder or environmentalist would appreciate. With her blinkered animal rights philosophy she resisted, for long, every measure by concerned environmentalists to evict feral dogs, which posed great threat to nesting birds and nestlings (see my video about dogs in Sultanpur). Eventually, the dogs were evicted but only after a lot of damage was already done.


The me-too media kowtowed, with journalists barely stopping to hold their breaths to investigate the facts. The television channel CNN-IBN, well-known for its shrieky alarmist stand on issues (modeled on the personality of its chief), pronounced that all was not well with Sultanpur. The ticker screamed: "Dead fish raise a stink".


The Times of India, not always saluted for its objectivity, surprised us pleasantly by showing reason in the face of blind speculation. Its story, carried on the same day as the HT story, pointed us to the source of the problem. The paper quoted Keshni Anand Arora, commissioner and principal secretary of forests in Haryana, as blaming the introduced African catfish or Mangur for predating on indigenous fish species and birds. 


Therein lay the tale. The African Mangur or Sharptooth Catfish (Clarias gariepinus), sometimes known as the Walking Catfish, occurs naturally from South Africa to northern Africa all the way up to southern Europe. It is a hardy and adaptive fish with extremely well-developed lungs that allow it to survive outside an aqueous environment for prolonged periods, including extended spells of drought (as witnessed this past summer in northern India). In fact, when pressed, the mangur actually walks on land using its fins to move from one water body to another. 


The Mangur was illegally introduced into India from Bangladesh and its cultivation is banned in some parts of the country. In May 2009, The Hindu reported: The breeding of African catfish is banned in India in the wake of an order by the Kerala High Court back in 2000. The case, on the basis of a petition from Kerala’s fish breeders, was referred by the Court to the National Committee on Exotic Species, which in turn recommended its ban. The African mangur, which grows into huge sizes, is not preferred even by traditional fish-eating communities who consider it “not very tasty”.


It was Mint, however, that brought out the best-reported and comprehensive coverage of the issue on Monday, highlighting the need for controlling the propagation of invasive species citing the case of the Magur as a flashpoint. The Mint story, by Padmaparna Ghosh, included a slideshow about invasive species and a video interview with my friend Gopi Sundar, research associate of the International Crane Foundation and an expert on wetland ecology. The story also quoted Anoop KR, director of the Keoladeo Ghana National Park in Bharatpur, who has been working at exterminating the invasive fish in his park. The bloated bellies of the mangur, which can grow up to 30 ft long, aroused suspicions which his dissections subsequently confirmed. The mangur in Bharatpur had been eating birds in additional to indigenous fish species.


It's pretty much the same story in Sultanpur, albeit under-reported. This summer, water has not been plentiful and the swamps have dried. The sanctuary has been sealed off and that explains why the nilgai -- considered a crop pest in these parts -- are dying off. The authorities are concertedly ridding the wetland of mangur and hoping that the extirpation of the species from the sanctuary will allow more native species of fish to breed and encourage birds to come back to the lake.


The shock of drought, Gopi explains, is actually beneficial to certain kinds of wetlands. The real issue -- that of invasive species -- must be addressed across the country. Lantana, a weed introduced accidentally from South America as an ornamental, now chokes the undergrowth in forests across the country. Its impact can be seen in the mixed deciduous forests of the Western Ghats. Parthenium, introduced along with wheat imports from America, is also widespread in Indian forests. Some native species have adapted well to the introduced varieties. Lantana, for instance, is favoured by some species of butterflies as well as bulbuls, sunbirds and flowerpeckers. Various NGOs including Atree and NCF are at work on projects to control the spread of invasive species. For concerned mediapersons, that should provide the context for the story.


A cabbage white butterfly on a lantana blossom. Lantana camara, native to South America, was introduced by gardeners. Pollination by local butterflies and berries spread by bulbuls, flowerpeckers and other local species make its control very difficult. 


I was disappointed by the reaction of some "concerned birders" and "activists" (who otherwise run profitable birding tours for Indians and expats) to the situation at hand. By fomenting the interest of ill-informed journalists in non-crises such as the annual cycle of flooding and drought in the wetlands of the subcontinent, these "friends of the environment" are stabbing it in the back. These are trying times, when every media vehicle worth its TRP (or self-funded readership survey) wants to appropriate the issue of "green journalism". It pays to be patient, talk to the real experts, and refrain from alarmist coverage altogether. 


Message to journos: hankering for scoops belongs in the realm of journalism of a different colour -- yellow, not green.


PHOTOS: (C) GOPI SUNDAR AND SWATI KITTUR

Sultanpur Bird Sanctuary, November 28, 2008

The fog clung to the ground in great murky blankets when I arrived at Sultanpur Bird Sanctuary on this Friday morning. At 6 AM, traffic on NH 8 via Mehrauli and Gurgaon had been thin, but my gruff but kindly Sikh cab driver held my gaze for an astonished moment in the rear-view mirror when I said I was going looking for birds. After driving more than 50 km from Delhi in bone-numbing cold and dangerous visibility levels to do this, he must have wondered. But he only said I could have gone to Bharatpur instead. But Sultanpur, so close to Delhi (in Haryana), is a celebrated avian paradise. And winter made it especially so. A Bluethroat, displaying its gaily banded chest, welcomed me. As the fog lifted, peafowl scuttled, but a covey of Grey Francolins grazed unperturbed on the path ahead of me. A thudding of hooves announced Nilgai. A female followed by three young calves crossed barely a hundred metres in front of me. Sarus cranes were calling, and somewhere among the reeds a Black-necked Stork was planning breakfast. The soft quackering of several migratory ducks, the trilling of Tailorbirds and at least three species of Prinia - Ashy, Plain and Graceful - provided the background music for my morning walk. The mist lifted gently, and the view became less ghostly. Painted storks and cormorants flew overhead. In a copse to my right, two male Black Redstarts had a mild face-off. A Rufous-tailed Shrike picked a dragonfly out of mid-air and dismembered it slowly on a thorn thicket. Red-throated Flycatchers were everywhere, some males showing off their bright throats. The water was alive with ducks. Though I was staring right into the sun, I could tell the silhouettes of Northern Shovellers and Spotbills. There were Common Teals, Lesser Whistling Ducks, Common and Crested Pochards, Tufted Ducks, Gadwall and Garganey. But among them all, sailing like frigates in a flotilla of dhows, were the Greylag Geese. Large, beautiful birds with bills of pink, they lorded over the water. Until a Eurasian Marsh Harrier scattered the ducks and extracted a shudder out of the Greylag flock. There were other raptors too - Spotted Eagles, Oriental Honey Buzzards, Black-shouldered Kites, Kestrels... As winter wears on, these waters will attract more migrants, among them Common Cranes, Bar-headed Geese and a host of warblers and waders. And then, by March, most of them would have returned, but for the Shovellers, who are usually the last to go.
  1. Alexandrine Parakeet
  2. Ashy Prinia
  3. Asian Pied Starling
  4. Bank Myna
  5. Barn Swallow
  6. Black Kite
  7. Black Redstart
  8. Black-shouldered Kite
  9. Bluethroat
  10. Blyth's Reed Warbler
  11. Booted Warbler
  12. Common Chiffchaff
  13. Common Coot
  14. Common Kestrel
  15. Common Moorhen
  16. Common Myna
  17. Common Peafowl
  18. Common Pochard
  19. Common Stone Chat
  20. Common Tailorbird
  21. Common Teal
  22. Common Woodshrike
  23. Crested Pochard
  24. Eurasian Collared Dove
  25. Gadwall
  26. Garganey
  27. Great Cormorant
  28. Greater Spotted Eagle
  29. Greenish Warbler
  30. Grey Francolin
  31. Grey Heron
  32. Greylag Goose
  33. House Crow
  34. Indian Cormorant
  35. Indian Robin
  36. Indian Silverbill
  37. Large Grey Babbler
  38. Laughing Dove
  39. Lesser Whistling Duck
  40. Lesser Whitethroat
  41. Little Cormorant
  42. Long-tailed Shrike
  43. Northern Shoveller
  44. Oriental Honey Buzzard
  45. Oriental Magpie Robin
  46. Oriental White-eye
  47. Orphean Warbler
  48. Paddyfield Pipit
  49. Painted Stork
  50. Pied Bushchat
  51. Pintail
  52. Plain Prinia
  53. Pond Heron
  54. Purple Heron
  55. Purple Sunbird
  56. Purple Swamphen
  57. Red Avadavat
  58. Red-throated Flycatcher
  59. Red-wattled Lapwing
  60. Rose-ringed Parakeet
  61. Rufous-tailed Shrike
  62. Sarus Crane (H)
  63. Shikra
  64. Spotbill Duck
  65. Spotted Dove
  66. Yellow-eyed Babbler
  67. Zitting Cisticola
Video grab: Spotted Eagle

Remembering Sultanpur 2006