Gharial conservation
- June 1, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Gharial conservation
Subject: Environment
Section: Species in news
Context:
- The collective efforts of local authorities and conservationists caused gharial nest numbers in Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary (KWS) rise to 36 in 2022, from 19 in 2019.
Details:
- The conservation efforts of critically endangered gharial in KWS were started in 1970s.
- The government launched a crocodile conservation project in 1975, with a goal to increase the numbers of India’s three crocodilian species – the freshwater crocodile, the gharial and the saltwater crocodile.
- They began breeding and rearing them in captivity and then releasing them in the wild.
Gharial:
- Gharials are endemic to South Asia.
- Historically, they were found in the riverine ecosystems of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and southern parts of Bhutan and Nepal.
- According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), an estimated 5,000 gharials could be found in the wild in the 1940s.
- By 1976, there were less than 200. In India, this fish-eating reptile was on the brink of extinction at the time, with populations dropping by about 96% across its entire distribution range.
- Presently, In India, they are found within the tributaries of the Ganga: Girwa(Uttar Pradesh), Son (Madhya Pradesh), Ramganga (Uttarakhand), Mahanadi (Odisha), Gandak(Bihar), and Chambal (Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan).
Conservation status:
- Under the Schedule-1 in Wildlife Protection Act 1972
- IUCN Red list: Critically endangered
Role in the ecosystem:
- Gharials are top predators and keystone species in running freshwater systems.
- They play a crucial role in bringing nutrients from the bottom of the riverbed to the surface, thus increasing fish populations and helping maintain the aquatic ecosystem.
- Of the three crocodilian species, the gharial is the most efficient fish catcher because of its unique snout.
Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary (KWS):
- KWS was among the first five sanctuaries declared since the project began, as it was home to gharial populations breeding in the Girwa river.
- Other sanctuaries were:
- The National Chambal Sanctuary (largest gharial conservation centre in India),
- Satkosia Gorge Wildlife Sanctuary,
- Son Gharial Sanctuary and
- Ken Gharial Sanctuary.
- Kukrail Gharial Rehabilitation Centre in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh
Reasons for the decline of the gharial population:
- After the initial success of the conserbation-cum-captive breeding project, the government stopped the captive breeding programme, thus the gharial population falls by 58%.
- Construction of Girijapuri barrage across Girwa River.
- Vegetative growth on sandy plains in the girwa river hinders the hatching activities of gharial.
- Habitat destruction
- Pollution in river streams.