Kalakkad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve (KMTR)
Kalakkad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve (KMTR),
(Tamil:களக்காடு முண்டந்துறை புலிகள் சரணாலயம்) located in the Southern Western Ghats in
Tirunelveli Districtand Kanyakumari District in the South Indian state of Tamil
Nadu, is the second-largest protected area in Tamil
Nadu State (behind only Sathyamangalam Wildlife Sanctuaryin Erode).
History
`The Kalakkad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve was created in 1988 by
combining Kalakad Wildlife
Sanctuary (251 km²) and Mundanthurai Wildlife Sanctuary (567 km²),
both established in 1962. Notification of 77 km² of parts of Veerapuli and
Kilamalai Reserve Forests in adjacent Kanyakumari
district, added to the reserve in April 1996, is pending. A 400 km2 (150 sq mi)
core area of this reserve has been proposed as a national park.
The
continuation of "Project Tiger" in Kalakkad Mundanthurai Tiger
Reserve for fiscal year 2010-2011, at the cost of Rs. 19433,000, was approved
by the National Tiger
Conservation Authority on 28
August 2010.
Geography
The
reserve is located between latitude 8° 25' and 8° 53' N and longitude 77° 10'
and 77° 35' E, about 45 km west of Tirunelveli Town, and forms the catchment area for 14 rivers and streams. Among these
rivers and streams, the Ganga,
Tambraparani, Ramanadi, Karayar, Servalar, Manimuthar,
Pachayar, Kodaiyar, Kadnar, and Kallar form the backbone of the irrigation
network and drinking water for the people of Tirunelveli,
Turicorin and part of Kanyakumari
District. Seven major dams—Karaiyar, Lower Dam, Servalar, Manimuthar, Ramanadi,
Kadnanadi and Kodaiyar—owe their existence to these rivers.
The
reserve spans a range of 40 to 1,800 m in elevation. Agasthiyamalai (1681 m.) is in the core zone of the
reserve.
Conservation
KMTR forms part of the inter-state (Kerala and Tamil Nadu) Agasthyamalai
Biosphere Reserve. This part of Agastya Mala hills in the core of KMTR is
considered one of the five centres of biodiversity
and endemism in India by the International Union for Conservation
of Nature (IUCN). The Western
Ghats, Agasthyamalai Sub-Cluster, including all of Kalakkad Mundanthurai Tiger
Reserve, is under consideration by the UNESCO World Heritage Committee for selection as a World Heritage Site.
The Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE)
has developed and implemented a conservation intervention program in KMTR to
decrease local villagers' dependency on the forests for fuel to and build
community awareness about the value of biodiversity in the area.
"Agasthya",
the KMTR newsletter, includes updates on research projects and staff activities
at KMTR. The contents of the first issue included: "A Sanctuary for Cycas circinalis," "Tiger
Almost," "Round in Agasthyamalai in Fourteen Days,"
"Corridors - It is Just Not for the Four Legged Furry Creatures,"
"Behaviour and Movement of Nilgiri
Langur in the Upper Kodayar Range – KMTR," "Canopy News," "Agasthya Village
Commons and Backyards to Meet the Biomass
Requirements: An Experiment with Panchayat
Raj and Women Collectives,"
"Bi-Lingual Field Guide Test Run," "Snippets from the
Field," "Cullenia exarillata:
A Keystone Species for Birds?" and "Tea, Tiger and Oranges".
Tigers
are also protected in Tamil Nadu at Mudumalai
National Park, Indira Gandhi National Park and Wildlife Sanctuary, Mukurthi National Park and Sathyamangalam
Wildlife Sanctuary.
Flora
& fauna
KMTR has at least 150 endemic plants, 33 fish, 37 amphibians, 81
reptiles, 273 birds and 77 mammal species. A 1997 Census by Project Tiger
produced the following wildlife counts: tiger 73, leopard 79,jungle cat 1 755, wild dog 1 718, elephant (N/A), gaur 232, sambar 1 302, chital 1 966, Nilgiri tahr 8 780, wild pig 187, mouse
deer 172,sloth bear 123, lion-tailed
macaque 37, bonnet macaque 61, Nilgiri
langur 61, common langur 61, slender
loris 61, giant squirrel 61, and crocodile 61.
Habitat use by the grey
jungle fowl (Gallus sonneratii)
at Mundanthurai plateau, Tamil Nadu, was investigated from December 1987 to
March 1988. The continuation of
"Project Tiger" in Kalakkad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve for fiscal
year 2010-2011, at the cost of Rs. 19 433 000, was approved by the National
Tiger Conservation Authority on 28 August 2010.
Settlements
The Kalakkad Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve has a large number of
employees of the Electricity Board and Public Works Department who stay in
three colonies and work at Karayar, Upper Dam, Servalar and Upper Kodayar
reservoirs within the reserve. Bombay
Burmah Trading Corporation has a
33.88 km² land in the core area of the reserve leased from singampatti
zamin valid until 2028. The Company has tea and coffee plantations and three
factories, and employs about 10 000 workers in the reserve.
There
are several small estates and five Kani Tribal habitations, consisting of
about 102 families. About 145 hamlets situated within 5 km of the
110 km eastern boundary of the reserve are inhabited by 100 000 people.
There are about 50 000 cattle grazing out of these fringe villages, with a
small number of cattle owned by the tea estate workers and residents of the
electricity board colonies.
SOURCE:WIKI


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