EcoEarth.Info Home

EcoEarth.Info

Environment Portal & Search Engine

Empowering the Environmental Sustainability Movement

Environment Search


Action Alert: Critical Elephant Corridor in India to be Severed

Help avert a serious threat to the largest surviving Elephant Population in India – the imminent severance of the Muthanga Elephant Corridor in Kerala

By Forests.org, a project of Ecological Internet - March 3, 2009


1.) Inform Yourself

  QUICK JUMP: ENTER INFO (2) | SEND (3)


NOTE: This is a protest, not a petition, sending emails to many real decision makers on matters vital to the Earth.

Asian Elephant
Caption: Asian Elephants require connected large habitats (link)

The largest and potentially most viable population of Asian elephants is found in the mountains of the Western Ghats where the three Indian states of Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka meet. You may recall that Ecological Internet's Earth Action Network first worked on Asian elephants in India, with some positive outcomes, in October of 2006.

Of a total population of about 2000 elephants surviving in Peninsular India in various fragmented habitat islands, the largest single population which may number over 1000 individuals is found in a near contiguous habitat extending over this 4500sq km tract. The best forage is in the Tamil Nadu section but the elephants need to migrate to Kerala and Karnataka each summer when water and food become scarce in Tamil Nadu

Direct movement from Tamil Nadu to Karnataka is no longer possible because of clearing and development and so now the only way for the elephants to migrate from the east to the west in the dry time and return during the wet season is via the Mudumalai Tiger Reserve in Tamil Nadu, to the Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary in Kerala. But due to habitat fragmentation this route must now pass through a corridor which is only about 2.5 km wide extending from Mulehole in Karnataka to Muthanga in Kerala.

The major inter-state highway linking Bangalore with Calicut passing through this corridor is used by hundreds of vehicles round the clock. Recently a decision was made to relocate four different Kerala government departmental check-posts to within the corridor involving all manner of infrastructure - building complexes, housing, offices, toilets and dormitories for drivers, a fuel filling station and so on. The checkpoint clearance takes hours, so there would constantly be hundreds of lorries parked along the road on either side of the checkpoints within the forests preventing elephants from using the corridor. A suitable alternative site for these check-posts exists outside the forest.

In another part of this elephant population's range, the proposed establishment of the India Based Neutrino Observatory (INO) in Singara, within the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve and in the buffer zone of the Mudumalai Tiger Reserve, threatens to further fragment elephant migration routes.

The Wayanad Nature Protection Group (Wayanad Prakruthi Samrakshana Samati) has appealed to the world community to help prevent the severance of this critical corridor.

Please note there are two different protest emails to send on this matter. It is much appreciated if you send both.



2.) Enter Your Information

  QUICK JUMP: SEND (3)


**EMAIL, FULL NAME and COUNTRY required and are automatically added as signature

**E-mail - please ensure you use a valid email address
   
(privacy)

**Full Name - please capitalize normally, i.e. "John Smith" not "john smith"
 

**Country


Message Title - please edit the message title and personalize the message below (no URLs allowed)

Your Message:


YOUR NAME, EMAIL & COUNTRY ADDED AUTOMATICALLY

bcc: YOU


3.) Send Alert

Did you remember to NOT SIGN YOUR NAME (added automatically)? If so, send the message:

      

I do not wish to receive occasional short notifications of new action alerts (~3 a month)
In addition to new action alerts, inform me of major forest and climate policy developments (~2/month), and provide original environmental analysis (~2/month) (more information)

Your message is going to 9 Recipients. Note, you may receive out of office or other emailed replies from protest email recipients.


   Earth Action Network Protest Participants

    3,178 people from 72 countries have sent 30,112 protest emails

          M Mulchrone - United Kingdom
          N Viviane - France
          J Forbes - United States
          H Toya - France
          J Mellica - United States
          S Gabb - United Kingdom
          I Dembicz - Poland
          I Dembicz - Puerto Rico
          M B D Flowers - United States
          G Hazelhofer - United States
          J Bailey - United Kingdom
          T Trails - United States
          T Perceval - United Kingdom
          M Bafik-Vehslage - United States
          H S Moller - Denmark
          H Heighberger - United States
          A Pyatt - United Kingdom
          T Klink - Germany
          B Pyatt - United Kingdom
          P Barclay - United States
          L Salazar - United States
          F Ludwig - Germany
          S Ludwig - Germany
          S Ludwig - Germany
          B Baxter - -- select a country --
           



** This alert requires JavaScript, and currently Firefox and Internet Explorer are the only tested browsers. Please let us know immediately if you are having difficulties sending the alert