Monday, January 29, 2018

The hills of Bramhagiri - a classic example of shola forests and montane grasslands

The Western Ghats is an amazing place.  The more I see it, the more marvellous it seems.  Those magnificent trees, the streams, the grasslands, shola forests... every visit is memorable.

The Bramhagiri hills in the border between Kerala and Karnataka is one such WG hotspot of biodiversity, and I have had the privilege of seeing these mountains from both the Coorg side and from Wayanad on trips organised by The Madras Naturalists' Society.

In April of 2015, we visited SAI sanctuary, a private sanctuary that is the efforts of Pam and Anil Malhotra, on the Coorg side, and more recently in January of 2018 we were in Wayanad.  The SAI Sanctuary trip was memorable in many ways - the glow worms, the walks, the meals, the skies filled with dramatic lightning, scorpions, snakes and much more.  So much excitement that I didn't know where to start, and I have postponed its telling by a few years!

This one is about the Bramhagiris, where you find the grassland-forest mosaic, characteristic of a lot of the Western Ghats ridges above 1500m.  It seems that over the last decade or so, these grasslands have seen a very strong and significant decline, as we have treated them as "poromboke", and a lot of it has been built over or converted to plantations.  A study in the Palani hills was reported in an article in The Hindu.

Researchers from Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE) in Bengaluru collaborated with a team from IISER in Tirupati, Botanical Survey of India, Vattakanal Conservation Trust and Gandhigram Rural Institute used satellite imagery to tabulate changes in the hilly landscape over nearly 530 sq.km. of the range which is popular for the hillstation, Kodaikanal.
If in 1973, shola grasslands spread across 373.78 sq.km. of the landscape, four decades later in 2014, it had shrunk to just 124.4 sq.km., marking a 66.7% decline. The reduction is seen even in native shola forests, whose area has declined by a third to 66.4 sq.km.
“These declines caught us by surprise, particularly considering that these dramatic changes have been occurring only around two decades ago,” said Milind Bunyan, Coordinator at the ATREE Academy for Conservation Science and Sustainability Studies, and the lead author of the paper that was published in PLOS One.
These drastic declines are particularly stark in shola grasslands (which are stunted forest growths of diverse grass species), and seem to be accelerating through the decades.
For the shola forests, however, the decline seems to have been arrested since 2003. Does this imply better conservation strategy for the woody forests, accompanied by a neglect of the grassland?    
The article also reports on the concomitant growth of timber plantations and agricultural land replacing these grasslands.


April 2015
The Bramhagiri hills in the distance, from the SAI sanctuary
These grasslands were similar to those on the peaks
Wherever we travelled in lower Coorg, the hills were always there, as were the leeches!
With overcast skies, and pre-monsoon humidities, we took a trip to the Iruppu Falls, part of the Bramhagiri sanctuary


The lush green forests were a sight for our summer-filled Chennai roasted eyes, as we entered the sanctuary.

The Bramhagiris sanctuary was legally notified in 1974, and is about 180 sqkms, and adjacent to Nagarhole (which we had driven through), and is an important elephant corridor.
The border runs through it as was evident from the mixture of Kannada and Malayalam signboards.

A lot of treks start from the Iruppu Falls, even a 9 kms one to the Bramhagiri peak, which we reached from the Thirunelly side this year. If we had done the Iruppu Falls-side trek, it would have been along the path of the Lakshmanthirtha river and the shola forests.


It was obviously popular with the bathers and tourists


At the start, a grand Peepul tree stood welcoming us, and a board informed us that it
was the "Peepul God".  I paid my respects.

The water flow was weak, being April, but the air was full of bird call, and there were
butterflies everywhere. They mud puddled in the wet soil, and I wondered why
they were not targeted by the leeches, hmm.

Malabar Banded Peacocks are endemic to the WG, and they were everywhere on the trail, as were Paris Peacocks.

This stream flows down and eventually joins the Cauvery.  i
Travancore wolf snake - Photo by Prasanna
Back down, and more excitement.  Fellow MNS traveller Prasanna felt a friendly lick when she put her hand in her backpack, which upon further investigation turned out to be a snake.

The bag was hurriedly taken to the edge of the forest and then with much instructions shouted from everyone, was turned upside down, and the pictured Travancore wolf snake slithered away at lightning speed.  Most of us, including me did not even get a look, so fast did it vanish!

Now, this incident had a telling effect on our driver from Mysore, a volley of nervous kannada, much gesticulation and a thorough cleaning like never before of his car!


We visited the Thirunelly  Vishnu temple briefly, after clambering up the necessary steps.  The temple is believed to be built by the Cheras, and the Papanasini river flows down from Bramhagiri, providing water to the temple and the town.  One our visit to the hills this year, we would often come across the pipe through which the water thundered down to the temple.

The grasslands interspersed with dense shola could be seen on the surrounding mist-laden hills

On to Kuruva Island in the Kabini delta.  Uninhabited it said, but we arrived to find it teeming with tourists and very much habited!  Do not expect to see much birdlife amidst the human cacophony, but the trees are majestic, and we were lucky to see a ....


...Flying lizard.  You will find it in the middle of the picture, and as I trained my binoculars on it, it soared to the next tree, and for that one sight, it was worth a visit!

In July of 2015, on a visit to Valparai, we saw the Grass Hills of Annamalais in the distance.   

The forest-grassland ecosystem of the Grass Hills in the Annamalais, seen from Valparai.

Jan 2018
A close encounter with the grassland-forest ecosystem had to wait until this year, when we were part of the MNS trip to Wayanad district.  We camped at Sultan Bathery over the Pongal weekend, and on Jan 14th, we left the KTDC's Pepper Grove at 530 am to drive down to Thirunelly to take the Thirunelly-Bramhagiri trek.  We began in darkness, and dawn emerged slowly, with the morning mist hampering the visibility.  We were almost at the Thirunelly station, when at 720am, just as we turned around a bend,     we caught a glimpse of a tusker munching his way though the forest.  It had its back to us, and preferred it that way obviously, as it continued to retreat and move into the forest.  
A wild elephant sighting for me is always special.  It cheers me, fills me with delight and awe and yet, makes me introspective and humble, and in a way I can't explain I feel a little shameful. Ashamed at what I as homeo sapiens have done to these magnificent creatures, provoking them into conflict, crowding them out of the planet that belongs to them as much as me, isolating herds, blocking off their corridors of access, chaining them in my temples, maiming and killing them for their tusks.

I was greedy for more such dracaenas, but it was not to be.  On this trip.  

We reached the starting point of the trek and had a upma breakfast before starting our climb through the forests.  We had our leech socks on, and of course not a single leech did we spy on the whole walk!

Blue skies and tall trees.  That was all my soul needed it seemed!

Our forest guide was Raju whom we learnt was a local Paniya tribe, and he told me that he goes up on this trek every day!  He was patient and seemed to manage a smattering of Tamil, of course knew Malayalam.  We also met Muneer along the way.  He was from the  Ferns Naturalists Society, and he pointed out the Malabar Trogon which was perched on a branch in the shade, just a little while into our trek.  Many of the group did see it, not me of course, which is par for the course as far as my birding goes.  For me, the birds have to sit there, out in the open (carrying a name board if possible), and I would then spot it!  

To my eternal astonishment, I did see the Brown Breasted flycatcher, the Malabar barbet, White breasted blue flycatcher  and the Chestnut headed bee eater.  Each one a beauty, but the barbet was the best, sitting high up in the crown of a tree, with the sun catching the red and blue!  The Chestnut-headed bee eater put on quite a show for us, diving for insects before coming back to the same perch.

Of course, all this bird activity and the marvellous trees meant that I malingered a lot.  Without my dear husband to hurry me along (he didn't make this trip), I was of course at the rear of the group.


Looking up at the blue skies, I was struck by how this is almost a forgotten memory.
Yes people, thats how blue the sky should be.  And no, there is no filter on this picture
and no colour correction.

Was this a Rosewood?  I could not get a confirmation.


A stately Benteak - "Naked mermaid of the forest" - with its peeling bark.
Running vertically down the hill was a  water pipe, and the thundering water was a direct reminder of the importance of these hills and forests to the freshwater requirements of the plains.

Suddenly, we emerged out of the shade and canopy of the forest, and we caught out first glimpses of the hilltops around.


The sunbathing grasses waved us on.

The path and the stunted trees



So this was how it looked at close quarters.  Those "bald" hills were not actually bald, but were grasslands.

The sun was up, and so were the butterflies.  Sailers, Fourrings I could identify, and the smaller grass blues and yellows.
But there were many others that I could not identify.

We reached the end of the gentle incline.  It ended in a super tall watch tower. The breeze was stiff, and we were told that those of of us who were interested  could do the last little bit to the summit, from where the views were even better.

Climbing the last bit.

It didn't seem a lot when we started.  The breeze was stiff and the sun not too harsh,
so off we went.  

There were several types of grasses - Alloteropsis, goose grass,  Supposedly 28 types of grasses are found here.  There were some with a purple hue, some that looked golden, and green of course.  I thought I smelt lemon grass, but I was too busy focussing on the path and making my way up to stop and take pictures.  Also, the wind was so strong, I felt quite vulnerable trying to walk up a path which seemed at 60 degrees!  Raju of course made his way up like a Nilgiri Tahr!

When we reached what we thought was the top, I realised that it was not really the top and there was another peak to be climbed.  I maybe should have returned at this point, as did many others, but Raju was very encouraging and seemed to indicate that it was not that much more!  Walkers who were returning also said the same thing, so on I went!  

We could see the islands of forests up close.  I assumed that this vegetation peculiarity was due to very thin soil cover, and the trees were growing where the water collected, but it seems that that is not as straightforward as that, and there is a more complicated reason for the forest-grassland formation,

Peak 1 and 2 done!  And now a gentle climb up 3 and 4!  I could not have made it without the helping and reassuring hand of Raju, who could probably walk up the path blindfolded, so many times has he done it.
It is the first time in my life that I have been higher than the surrounding hilltops.  I particularly liked this view of the single grassy bald peak amidst the forested ones.

Still further up.  There was elephant dung all the way up here.  My superego encouraged and reasoned that if the elephant could make its way up, so should I.  My id pointed out to me that the elephant has four feet.  Raju reasoned that I had come thus far, and it was not right that I give up.  So on I went  

The beautiful grasslands.  Up close you could see there were little shrubs, and many varieties of grass.  

Grasses are important.  Wheat, rice.... very important.  

More views

Looking down into Coorg, Karnataka


That's Thirunelly down there.  

1215, and this was the top of the Bramhagiri peak.

Elumalai soaking it in, the sun, the wind and the blue sky.  Butterflies rushed past our noses, swept away by the wind.  A black eagle did not seem in control of its flight.
One last look around before we descended, after a half hour stop.  Dhruva managed a phone call down to the others - BSNL of course!


Back under the trees, bruised toes and creaking knees, legs like jelly, the descent always more painful than the ascent!
We filled our bottles with the cool and fresh waters of the stream before heading down.  Sadly my 2 litre camelback came apart, and all that sweet and cold water went sloshing into the earth.

Raju hurried us down, no lingering he said, fearing that elephants were close.  We fell silent and for once the MNS lot were fast and disciplined and stayed together.

It was close to 3 when we trundled in to Thirunelly looking for some lunch.  Ambika Lunch Home was out of food, and we were saved by Anupama Lunch Home - Rice with sambar and mor kuzhambu keerai poriyal and papadam. Best lunch!  Topped with a nendram banana.

While our driver Iqbal steered us back to Sultan Batheri, I for one fell into an exhausted snooze.  It was past 6pm and dusk was falling.  A hot bath and dinner awaited.


Wednesday, January 3, 2018

Nicobar islands again

The first official record of animal diversity of the Great Nicobar

The Great Nicobar Island is located further south than Kanyakumari and is closer to Myanmar and Sumatra than to the Indian mainland. Over millennia of evolution and isolation, the island has developed its unique biological diversity. The devastating impact of the 2004 Asian Tsunami had an adverse impact on this biodiversity. Even as the island recovers, increasing human activity is causing habitat disturbance that is affecting the numbers of some of the critical species.
The Zoological Survey of India has published the first official record of the animal diversity of the Great Nicobar Island in a book titled Faunal diversity of Great Nicobar Biosphere Reserve.
“This is the first time a holistic account of the animal diversity of the Great Nicobar Biosphere Reserve has been published. This book is going to provide baseline numbers for all future studies in Great Nicobar Island that are going to be conducted by the Zoological Survey of India. We are making this data publicly available to aid other organisations who aim to conserve its unique biodiversity,” said Kailash Chandra, director of the Zoological Survey of India (ZSI).
In this study, done from April 2010 to March 2013 in the Great Nicobar Biosphere Reserve, scientists at the ZSI recorded the animal diversity of this region from both its terrestrial and marine ecosystems. They also evaluated the success of conservation strategies implemented in this area and listed the factors that are putting the biodiversity in this hotspot at risk. The book lists a total of 1767 species of animals found on the island, which represents 23% of the total diversity of Andaman and Nicobar islands. It includes 558 terrestrial and 1209 marine species.
The marine flatworm Pseudoceros leptostichus. Picture from Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata and Port Blair, India.
Pankaj Sekhsaria, a scientist at the Department of Humanities and Social Science, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT)-Delhi, and associated with Kalpavriksh, an organisation engaged with research, advocacy and legal issues in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, welcomes this research initiative by the ZSI. “These islands remain largely unexplored, and there is likely to be much here that is new to science. We need to make people aware of the richness and diversity of this region to gain more support for its protection and conservation,” he said.
The Andaman and Nicobar archipelago
The Andaman and Nicobar group comprising 572 islands is located between the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea in the Indian Ocean. These islands fall in the Indo-Malayan geographical region since they have a continuation with Myanmar in the north and Sumatra in the south. The Nicobar group comprises just 24 of the 572, and Great Nicobar is the largest island within this group.
It is home to only two tribes — the Shompen and the Nicobarese. There are just 219 Shompen left. They live in the dense interior parts of the reserve, and lead a semi-nomadic life, depending on forest resources for survival, shunning the outside world. The Nicobarese are farmers and fisherfolk who live in the coastal areas and are more open to interacting with outsiders.
The Nicobar pigeon, Caloenas nicobarica. Picture from Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata and Port Blair, India.
The 1044 square kilometre Great Nicobar island is an incredible biodiversity hotspot, bestowed with a variety of ecosystems ranging from grasslands, evergreen forests, mangroves, deciduous trees and coral reefs. It is, in fact, part of the Sundaland biodiversity hotspot, one of the four hotspots that India houses (the other three being Western Ghats and Sri Lanka, Eastern Himalaya and Indo-Burma). The island was declared as a Biosphere Reserve in January 1989 by the Indian government and included in the UNESCO Man and Biosphere program in May 2013.
“Great Nicobar Island is the southernmost island of India and one of the unique biodiversity hotspots of the world. There are many endemic and threatened species in this region, and it is important to conserve them because they aren’t found elsewhere,” remarked Chandra, who was the principal investigator of the study.
A mega-diverse island
The book is voluminous at 30 chapters and lists more than 300 species of fish, 139 molluscs like oysters, clams, squid and octopus, about 50 echinoderms like starfish and sea urchins, 25 sponges, 30 soft corals, 30 shrimps, four lobsters, and five sea slugs. It also has details of 34 reptiles, including eight geckos and 25 skinks. The diversity of invertebrates is equally high, with 55 butterfly species, 66 beetles and about 40 species of Orthoptera (locusts, crickets, and grasshoppers). Among the 155 species of moths, three — Vitesa nicobaricaMiltochrista danieli, and Nyctemera nicobarica — are endemic.
The Nicobar parakeet, Psittacula caniceps. Picture from Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata and Port Blair, India.
“In addition to the endemic bird Nicobar crake that we discovered from Campbell Bay in 2011, we also found a new species of brightly coloured flatworm and one damselfly during this study,” remarked C. Raghunathan, scientist at the ZSI and a co-author of the book.
There are a total of 71 species of birds recorded in this region. Several endemic species such as the Nicobar serpent eagle (Spilornis klossi), Nicobar parakeet (Psittacula caniceps), Nicobar Scops-owl (Otus alius), jungle flycatcher (Cyornis nicobaricus), wood pigeon (Columba palumboides), and the Andaman cuckoo-dove (Macropygia rufipennis) are threatened by increased human settlements and resulting habitat modification. The population of the flightless Nicobar megapode (Megapodius nicobariensis), listed as ‘Endangered’ by the IUCN, has been dwindling.
The Nicobar megapode, Megapodius nicobariensis. Picture from Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata and Port Blair, India.
The need for conservation
Agriculture, tourism, and deforestation due to urban development are adversely affecting the overall flora and fauna of this region, according to this report.
This region is amongst the best sites for nesting turtles, especially for leatherbacks (Dermochelys coriacea), green turtles and hawksbills (Eretmochelys imricata). However, increased sand mining and beach pollution are posing a threat to their breeding sites.
The leatherback sea turtle, Dermochelys coriacea. Picture from Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata and Port Blair, India.
“Improved patrolling on beaches during nesting season and increasing public awareness may help conserve these animals,” Chandra observed.
Of the total of 78 species of crabs recorded in this region, “the population of coconut crab, which is protected under the Wildlife Protection Act is continuously decreasing, and special measures must be initiated to prevent this loss,” warned Chandra.
The coconut crab or robber crab, Birgus latro. Picture from Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata and Port Blair, India.
Several endemic species find a place on the IUCN Red List – the Nicobar flying fox (Pteropus faunulus) is categorised Vulnerable, and the Nicobar tree shrew (Tupaia nicobarica) and Miller’s Nicobar rat (Rattus burrus) are listed as endangered.
The numbers of long-tailed macaque (Macaca fascicularis), the only primate species in this region is also facing threats in areas adjoining human settlements such as farms. Their numbers seem stable as of now but they may be experiencing the brunt of habitat loss, as there are frequent reports of human-macaque conflict, Chandra said. Villagers use domesticated dogs to protect their crops from the macaques. His team reported significant numbers of handicapped and injured adult animals in their survey.
The Nicobar long-tailed macaque, Macaca fascicularis. Picture from Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata and Port Blair, India.
Meera Anna Oommen, associate director of the Dakshin Foundation, agrees that “the long-tailed macaques frequently raid crops on the Great Nicobar Island,” but believes that their numbers are unlikely to be affected in the long run. She visited the Great Nicobar Island trying to habituate a troop as a part of her study. “But they are an aggressive lot and rowdy to boot,” she explained. They are as common and problematic as the bonnet and rhesus monkeys on mainland India, she adds.
According to Chandra, another concern in the Great Nicobar Island is poaching of sea cucumbers and seashells by divers from neighbouring countries in these waters. “Stringent measures to curb this activity need to be implemented to conserve these valuable resources,” he warned.
The 2004 tsunami wiped out 6915 hectares of forestland from the Great Nicobar. The natural mangrove vegetation and coconut plantations have recovered significantly but not completely.
Chandra believes that in addition to listing the animal diversity of the Great Nicobar Island and being a reference manual for scientists, this book will educate citizens, fuel discussions and encourage organisations to take up conservation measures in this region in the future.
CITATION:
Faunal diversity of the Great Nicobar Biosphere Reserve. Edited by Chandra K., Raghunathan C., & Mondal T. (2017). Published by the Zoological Survey of India.

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Narcondam Hornbills

Happy news for the new year, and I hope Rutland Island also gets to survive.



Narcondam Hornbills edge back from the brink

The island habitat of the endangered species was slated to host a defence post, raising ecologists’ concerns 

Amid shrinking natural habitats and climate change driving several species to the brink of extinction, reports of a growing population of the endangered Narcondam Hornbill offer ecologists some cheer.
A visit to Narcondam on December 16 and 17 by C. Sivaperuman, a scientist with the Zoological Survey of India (ZSI), found a healthy population of the bird. “We could spot a number of breeding pairs and young birds. In a span of a few hours, we could spot more than a hundred of these birds,” Mr. Sivaperuman told The Hindu.
With a velvet-black plumage and an oversized yellow beak, the Narcondam Hornbill and its remote habitat were the centre of a controversy following a 2014 proposal to install a Defence Ministry listening post on the remote island in the Andaman and Nicobar chain. The 7 sq. km. island, a declared wildlife sanctuary, is near Myanmar’s Coco island, where the Chinese have a military presence. 
Despite strong reservations from a number of environmentalists and experts, the office of the Lt. Governor of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands had suggested in August 2014 that an alternative home for the species be considered as Narcondam was a “vital place for strategic surveillance and establishment of a radar station”.
Fortunately for the bird, considered endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and on the Red List of threatened species, the Defence Ministry did not pursue the matter. 
D.M. Shukla, Additional Principal Chief Conservator of Forests, Andaman and Nicobar Island, told The Hindu that there had been no construction on the island, except for a police outpost.
According to experts, Yahya and Zarri conducted one of the last detailed studies on the Narcondam Hornbill (Rhyticeros narcondami) in 2002, when they estimated 68-85 breeding pairs of the bird with a population of about 400 individuals. 
Though Mr. Sivaperuman has not conducted a count of the birds on the island, he said, “The number is definitely more than 400.” 
Plans are afoot for long-term studies of the endangered bird. “Considering the isolation of this important species and scanty information on its ecology and biology, a two-day survey was conducted to prepare a long-term monitoring proposal,” Mr. Sivaperuman said. 
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Swallows and us - coexistence in the hills

We saw them nesting in the roof of an enclosure in Dandeli.  It was close to sundown, and the parents were busy zipping in and out of the nests, bringing feed.  They were so fast, I was unable to see them except as a moving speck!


Ducking shoppers, hidden swallows - ALL - The Hindu


By Janaki Lenin

The shopkeeper is serving his customer when something drops on the counter near his elbow. The man doesn’t even flinch, continuing with the transaction. On closer look, there are many white-and-black bird droppings on the newspaper beside him.
High above their heads, four identical chicks sit motionless in a small earthen cup. A barn swallow that swoops into the shop lands on the edge of the nest. All three mouths gape wide, each vying for the insect tidbit. A few years ago, the parents had ferried several pellets of mud and grass mixed with their saliva to build this nest. As it dried, it hardened to form a cup to which they return every year.
At first, the parent birds ate their newborns’ excrement, keeping the nest hygienic and saving the shopkeeper the hassle of cleaning it. Then the offspring pooped faeces enclosed in a membranous sac for easy disposal. But now the chicks are older and their parents can’t deal with their frequent pooping. So the chicks back up to the edge of their cosy nest and aim out to the cash counter below. These random squirts could have targeted merchandise, the billing machine, or the shopkeeper’s head had he not made some changes. He cleared the area of stock and moved his chair. Instead, the droppings hit a newspaper that the man changes as needed.
Elevator nestMany shops in market areas across the Himalayas — from Kullu in Himachal Pradesh to Kurseong in West Bengal — host the nests of barn swallows. Some have three or four nests, and the space above people’s heads is busy with air traffic as the parent birds speed in and out, provisioning their young.
When humans began building shelters, these cave-nesting birds were spoilt for choice. Unlike other birds that seek natural settings far away from humans to raise their young, barn swallows, as their name suggests, seem to idealise human-made structures.
Suhel Quader of the Nature Conservation Foundation (NCF) says even restaurants tolerate the birds’ unhygienic toilet habits. They affix a metal plate below the nests to catch the poop, so it doesn’t contaminate their clientele’s plates.
No raptor has the gumption to fly into small spaces crowded with people. So the diminutive birds go about the business of rearing babies without having to look over their shoulders all the time. But people bring their own set of problems, such as pet cats. If the birds choose the spot well, no feline can scale sheer walls. An American book says the birds even nest in slow-moving trains!
Another unorthodox nesting location that Quader has noticed is the handle of a shop’s rolling shutter. Every morning, when the establishment opens for business, the birds enjoy an elevator ride from the floor to the roof. And every evening, they come down to the ground. A shopkeeper told a surprised Quader that his shop had no rodents to bother the chicks.
Elephant tricksBut what of the humans? No one appreciates filth falling on their heads or floors. Elsewhere in the subcontinent, we dislike cobwebs, and we don’t tolerate house geckos soiling the ceiling. American wildlife agencies advise homeowners who don’t want the birds nesting in their homes to install barriers, make noise, remove nests before they lay their eggs, or paint a nonstick silicone paint, so the mud doesn’t stick. But in the Himalayas, the birds got lucky.
The hill folk think barn swallows bring them good luck. Some try to offer full board, laying out feed for them, but the birds are content with boarding alone. They prefer to catch their own meals in a high-speed chase. These small birds sit on overhead electric lines, watching the hustle and bustle of the street below. When one spots its quarry, it swoops down, weaving its way between pushcarts, vehicles, and pedestrians. The bird snaps up its insect prey in mid-flight and dives into the shop or house to cram its prize into a hungry yellow mouth.
What happens when the shop closes for the day? Shopkeepers told Sanjay Sondhi of Kalpavriksh that the birds know the shops’ schedules and swoop in before closing time. Most of these are family-run establishments that open every day and take no days off. If they can’t open the shop themselves, they make sure someone else does.
At a police station in Uttarakhand, Quader noticed barn swallows come and go through a broken window, so they were not dependent on the police to let them in.
The owner of a pharmacy in Kurseong cut a hole in the shutter for the birds so they’d have their own entrance. But they refused to use it, to his distress. Santhosha Gubbi, a forester, writes in his blog that he borrowed an idea from a colleague, who had persuaded wild elephants to use an underpass in Rajaji National Park. He collected balls of elephant dung and placed them strategically along the trail he wanted the animals to use. On seeing and smelling the ordure, the animals assumed that since others had passed through, the passage must be safe to use. Gubbi advised the pharmacy owner to smear swallow dropping on the exit hole. Apparently, barn swallows reason like elephants, and the trick worked.
Once the youngsters fledge, the parents lay another round of eggs, and the whole scenario plays out again before cold winds sweep down from the mountains.
Even restaurants tolerate the birds’ unhygienic toilet habits. They affix a plate below the nests to catch the poop




GW Pelican?

eBird India Checklist – Sholinganallur/Perumbakkam Marsh, Kancheepuram County, Tamil Nadu, IN – Sun Dec 31, 2017 – 74 species



Great White Pelican Pelecanus onocrotalusA single bird was actively feeding along with a huge flock of Spot-billed Pelicans. Initially looked good for a Great White Pelican, but on closer look, got a bit confused because of the orange skin (usually pink) around eye which extends to the bulged forehead. Later, we could find some similar looking GWP images in the net.
Looks like there are some aberrations in GW Pelicans and ours is such an aberrant individual.
We saw the bird around 6.50am, observed it closely for around 10 minutes, but then it just vanished!


There are some detailed pictures posted on e-bird, at the link.



Moral of the story:  Look at every bird in a flock, from now on!

Monday, December 18, 2017

The treepie


The treepie called me to my window.
Softly,
Like water dripping in a pool
Bob-o-link, bob-o-link.

The teak tree leaves and the wind did their best to hide it from me.
I caught but a glimpse.


Why do I smile so?



Rufous tree pie (Dendrocitta vagabunda) on the teak tree (Tectona grandis) in my neighbour's garden.

Thursday, December 14, 2017

The wild olive party

Red bugs - Melamphaus faber (as far as I can make out)- of the Pyrrhocoridae family, feasting on fruits of Sterculia foetida

Flat shaped, and seeming to be permanently conjoined, these bugs are the same family as the cotton stainer bugs of the Dysdercus genus.  Those bugs leave a red/yellow stain on cotton, as well as cut the strands, which basically makes the cotton useless for our human industrial use I guess.

I suppose they are all cousins, but I don't think this one is that one. There are supposedly some 300 types of these, with different kinds of markings.  Uff!  Now I need to peer at these things more closely as well.

In the meantime, the bugs in question were of course having a jolly feast of wild olive  over ripe goo.

The rooster

The Grey Jungle Cock, Nature’s own alarm clock, roams the wooded areas of Munnar when not being snared - The Hindu



A delightful description on the comic rooster.

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Sun, cloud, sea and me

It was one of those days - everything seemed wrong - sinkholes on Mount Road, Ripon building falling apart, smog mask on my niece in Delhi, non-stop drilling for the last one month in a neighbouring apartment, real estate dealings that frustrate, ridiculous political fuss over a movie, power failure accompanied by an EB man on top of the transformer with what seemed as utter disregard to safety - and I was ready to move out of the city; and country for that matter.

While I seriously reviewed New Zealand, Scotland, Canada and Scotland, my more sensible husband gently suggested that I go for a walk.  I needed the exercise he said, the fresh air would do me good, he said.  (I think he just wanted me and my ranting out of the house.)  And so I went.

Oh Madras, all is forgiven.

The clouds caught the light of the setting sun and magically transformed the waters into gold and orange.  

In a minute, it was gone.
A minute that filled me with so much awe, delight and elation.
I am so lucky.

And today morning, it was a silvery sea.  A black and white portrait, ever changing, as the clouds scudded by with the strong breezes from the north.
Blue skies ever since,
Peace at home.
A relieved husband.

Friday, October 13, 2017

The Pheasant Tailed Jacanas of Pallikaranai

I remember when I first saw the Jacana walk on water (well almost), it just blew my mind, and I spent hours at Dungarpur just observing their spidery legs and jerky movements.  

The pheasant-tailed jacana (Hydrophasianus chirurgus) is quite common in the wetlands of Chennai, and always make for interesting sightings as they dart on top of the floating vegetation.

Mr Ramanan is a regular Sunday visitor to the marshes of Pallikaranai and Sholinganallur and has documented their courtship and breeding over several years. The females are larger and more colourful than the male and are polyandrous.  it is the males that incubate the eggs!

Mr Ramanan notes, "In 2016 in the month of June I had come across two active nests of Pheasant Tailed Jacanas closer to the road side itself. The female is polyandrous and the male takes care of entire breeding of the chicks."

Mr Ramanan noted that the smaller male chased the female with which he had previously mated, 
went underneath the bird, pushed it from the squatting position.  it looked as if the male was suspicious of the female, and did not want another clutch of eggs of another male in its territory?

In another instant, Mr Ramanan observed the male take the chicks under its wing, when a predator was sighted.  The alarm call had been raised by the female.
This is the male's protection posture, with all the chicks underneath, looking like a single adult with eight legs!

Mr Ramanan captured this picture of the female's frightened posture, with body erect but tail down.  (And do see those claws!)
"Once the threat disappeared they started feeding as usual."

"The breeding plumages of the sickle shaped tail with predominant amount of chocolate-brown colour and in flight a large amount white, was observed from the month of May to June this year. On one occasion when the early morning sun rays peeped through the clouds, it painted the female Pheasant-Tailed Jacana with the golden touch of rays which really accentuated its silky golden coloured nape."
Mr Ramanan continued his watch of the PTJs through the summer of 2016 and 2017.  "The sign of chasing all other birds like white breasted water-hen and purple moorhen, from their territory in the month of July, indicated that it has already laid the eggs.  As expected the first chick emerged on the 4th of August, and were seen with the male Pheasant-Tailed Jacana which had shed the tail by that time. I was expecting for some more chicks on subsequent days but it was not to be and the male has only one chick as on 11th of August. On 9th of August again came across the protection display. This time just like last year the female raised the alarm call when a common kite hovered over it and the male with the feeble call attracted the chick and took it under its wings.   The female immediately hovered over and chased the Common Kite. It is clear from the above that female also played an active role while breeding in case of threat, apart from the role of guarding their territory."

Incubating male seen at Sholinganallur.
Notice the large brown eggs! PTJ females usually lay a clutch of four.
When a Shikra was sighted, the male PTJ aggressively left its clutch unguarded and chased the predator.
Returning after a successful chase!
With his keen eye, patience and regular documentation, Mr Ramanan has been able to put together an entire series on the breeding of the PTJs, which makes for a fascinating account.

The marshes and wetlands of Chennai - important and precious for so many creatures big and small.

Bangalore diaries - Kaikondrahalli lake visits

I visited 2023 November, so it has been close to a year . 26th October 2024 8-10am To my delight, I discovered a skywalk across the Sarjapur...