The
Western Ghats (Kannada/Tulu:
ಸಹ್ಯಾದ್ರಿ, Marathi/Konkani: सह्याद्री, Malayalam: സഹ്യാദ്രി / സഹ്യപര്വതം,
Tamil: மேற்குத் தொடர்ச்சி மலை) also
sometimes known as the Sahyadri Mountains, is a
mountain range along the western side of India
.
It runs
north to south along the western edge of the Deccan Plateau
, and separates the plateau from a narrow coastal
plain along the Arabian
Sea
. The range starts near the border of Gujarat
and Maharashtra
, south of the River Tapti
, and runs approximately 1600 km through the
states of Maharashtra
, Goa
, Karnataka
, Tamil
Nadu
and Kerala
ending at
Kanyakumari
, at the southern tip of India. About sixty
percent of the Western Ghats are located in the state of
Karnataka.
These hills cover 60,000 km² and form the catchment area for a
complex of
river systems that drain
almost 40% of India.The average elevation is around
1,200
meters. The area is one of the
world’s ten "Hottest
biodiversity
hotspots" and has over 5000 species of flowering plants, 139
mammal species, 508 bird species and 179 amphibian species. At
least 325 globally
threatened species
occur in the Western Ghats.
Geology
The
Western Ghats are not true mountains, but are the faulted edge of
the Deccan
Plateau
. They are believed to have been formed
during the break-up of the super continent of
Gondwana some 150 million years ago .
Geophysicists Barron and Harrison from the
University of
Miami
advocate the theory that the west coast of India
came into being somewhere around 100 to 80 mya after it broke away from Madagascar.
After the break-up, the western coast of India would have appeared
as an abrupt cliff some 1,000 meters in height .
Soon after its
detachment, the peninsular region of the Indian plate drifted over
the Réunion hotspot, a volcanic
hotspot in the Earth's lithosphere near the present day location of
Réunion
.
A huge
eruption here some 65 mya is thought to
have laid down the Deccan
Traps
, a vast bed of basalt
lava that covers parts of central India. These volcanic
upthrusts led to the formation of the northern third of the Western
Ghats. These dome-shaped uplifts expose underlying 200 mya rocks
observed in some parts such as the
Nilgiri
Hills.
Basalt is the predominant rock
found in the hills reaching a depth of . Other rock types found are
charnockites,
granite gneiss,
khondalites,
leptynites,
metamorphic
gneisses with detached
occurrences of crystalline
limestone,
iron ore,
dolerites
and
anorthosites. Residual
laterite and
bauxite ores
are also found in the southern hills.
Mountains
The
Western Ghats extend from the Satpura Range
in the north, go south past Goa
, through
Karnataka
and into Kerala
and Tamil Nadu
. The major hill range starting from the
north is the
Sahyadhri (
the benevolent mountains)
range.
This range is home to many hill stations like Matheran
,Lonavala
-Khandala, Mahabaleshwar
, Panchgani
,Amboli Ghat, Kudremukh
and Kodagu
.
The range
is called Sahyadri in northern Maharashtra
and Sahya Parvatam in Kerala.
The
Biligirirangans southeast of
Mysore
in Karnataka
, meet the Shevaroys
(Servarayan range) and Tirumala
range farther east, linking the Western Ghats to
the Eastern Ghats. In the south the
range is known as the Nilagiri malai in Tamil Nadu
.
Smaller
ranges, including the Cardamom Hills
and the Nilgiri Hills,
are in northwestern Tamil
Nadu
. The Nilgiri Hills are home to the hill
station Ootacamund
. In the southern part of the range in the
Anaimalai
Hills
, in western Tamil Nadu and Kerala, Ana Mudi
is the highest peak in Western Ghats.
Chembra Peak , Banasura Peak , Vellarimala and Agasthya mala
are also in Kerala. Doddabetta is .
Mullayanagiri is the highest peak in Karnataka
. The Western Ghats in Kerala is home to many
tea and
coffee plantations. The major gaps in the range are the
Goa Gap, between the Maharashtra and Karnataka sections, and the
Palghat Gap on the Tamil Nadu/Kerala
border between the Nilgiri Hills and the Anaimalai Hills.
The
northern portion of the narrow coastal plain between the Western
Ghats and the Arabian Sea is known as the Konkan Coast or simply Konkan,the central portion is called Kanara
and the
southern portion is called Malabar
region or the Malabar
Coast. The foothill region east of the Ghats in
Maharashtra
is known as Desh, while the
eastern foothills of the central Karnataka state is known as
Malenadu.http://www.all-about-india.com/Geography-of-India.html
The largest city within the mountains is the city of Pune
(Poona), in the Desh region
on the eastern edge of the range. The
Biligirirangan Hills lies at the
confluence of the Western and
Eastern Ghats.
The mountains intercept the rain-bearing westerly
monsoon winds, and are consequently an area of high
rainfall, particularly on their western side. The dense forests
also contribute to the precipitation of the area by acting as a
substrate for condensation of moist rising
orographic winds from the sea, and releasing much
of the moisture back into the air via
transpiration, allowing it to later condense
and fall again as rain.
Peaks
- Salher
(Maharashtra), Kalsubai
(Maharashtra), Mahableshwar
(Maharashtra), Sonsogor
(Goa), Kemmangundi
(Karnataka), Tadiandamol
(Karnataka), Mullayanagiri (Karnataka), Kudremukh
(Karnataka),Pushpagiri
(Karnataka), Doddabetta
(Tamil Nadu) & Anai Mudi
(Kerala).
Lakes and reservoirs
The Western Ghats have several manmade lakes and reservoirs.
The well
known lakes are the Ooty (2500 m altitude, 34.0 ha) in Nilgiris,
and the Kodaikanal
(2285 m, 26 ha) and the Berijam
in the Palni Hills
. All lakes are situated in the state of
Tamil Nadu.
Two smaller lakes, the Devikulam
(6.0 ha) and the Letchmi Elephant (2.0 ha) are in the
Munnar
range, and
Yercaud
lake (1340 m, 8 ha) in Shevaroy Hills.
The majority of streams draining the Western Ghats and joining the
Rivers Krishna and Kaveri carry water during monsoon months only
and have been dammed for
hydroelectric
and
irrigation purposes. The major
reservoirs are: Lonavala and Walwahn in Maharashtra; V.V. Sagar,
K.R. Sagar and Tungabhadra in the Malenadu area of Karnataka;
Mettur, Upper Bhawani, Mukurti, Parson's Valley, Porthumund,
Avalanche, Emarold, Pykara, Sandynulla and Glenmorgan in Tamil
Nadu; and Kundallay and Maddupatty in the High Range of Kerala. Of
these the Lonavla, Walwahn, Upper Bhawani, Mukurti, Parson's
Valley, Porthumund, Avalanche, Emarold, Pykara, Sandynulla,
Glenmorgan, Kundally and Madupatty are important for their
commercial and sport fisheries for trout, mahseer and common
carp.
Rivers
The Western Ghats form one of the three
watershed of India, feeding the perennial
rivers of India. Important rivers include the
Godavari,
Krishna, and
Kaveri.
These rivers flow to the east and drain out
into the Bay of
Bengal
. The west flowing rivers, that drain into the
Arabian
Sea
, are fast-moving, owing to the short distance
travelled and steeper gradient. Important rivers
include the Mandovi
and Zuari
.
Many of these rivers feed the backwaters of Kerala and Maharashtra.
Rivers
that flow eastwards of the Ghats drain into the Bay of Bengal
. These are comparatively slower moving and
eventually merge into larger rivers such as the Kaveri and Krishna.
The
larger tributaries include the Tunga
river, Bhadra
river
, Bhima
River
, Malaprabha River,
Ghataprabha River, Hemavathi
river
, Kabini River.
In
addition there are several smaller rivers such as the Chittar River
, Manimuthar River,
Kallayi
River
, Kundali River,
Pachaiyar River, Pennar River
, Periyar
and the Kallayi River
.
Fast running rivers and steep slopes have provided sites for many
large hydro-electric projects.
There are about major 50 dams along the
length of the Western Ghats with the earliest project up in 1900
near Khopoli
in Maharashtra. Most notable of these
projects are the Koyna
Dam
in Maharashtra, the Parambikulam Dam
in Kerala, and the Linganmakki Dam
in
Karnataka.http://www.all-about-india.com/Geography-of-India.html
The reservoir behind the Koyna Dam, the Shivajisagar Lake, is one of the largest
reservoirs in India with a length of and depth of .
During the monsoon season, numerous streams fed by incessant rain
drain off the mountain sides leading to numerous and often
spectacular waterfalls.
Among the most well known is the Jog Falls
, Kunchikal
Falls
, Sivasamudram Falls
, and Unchalli
Falls. The Jog Falls is the highest natural waterfall in
South Asia and is listed among the 1001 natural wonders of the
world.
Talakaveri
wildlife sanctuary is a critical watershed and the
source of the river Kaveri. This
region has dense evergreen and semi-evergreen vegetation, with
shola-grassland in areas of higher elevation. The steep terrain of
the area has resulted in scenic waterfalls along its many mountain
streams.
Sharavathi and Someshvara Wildlife
sanctuaries in Shimoga
district
are the source of the Tungabhadra
River system.
Climate
Climate in the Western Ghats varies with altitudinal gradation and
distance from the equator. The climate is humid and tropical in the
lower reaches tempered by the proximity to the sea. Elevations of
and above in the north and and above in the south have a more
temperate climate. Average annual temperature here are around 15 °C
(60 °F). In some parts frost is common, and temperatures touch the
freezing point during the winter months. Mean temperature range
from 20 °C (68 °F) in the south to 24 °C (75 °F) in the north. It
has also been observed that the coldest periods in the south
western ghats coincide with the wettest.
During the
monsoon season between June and
September, the unbroken Western Ghats chain acts as a barrier to
the moisture laden clouds. The heavy, eastward-moving rain-bearing
clouds are forced to rise and in the process deposit most of their
rain on the windward side. Rainfall in this region averages
3,000–4,000 mm (120–160 in) with localised extremes
touching 9,000 mm (350 in). The eastern region of the
Western Ghats which lie in the
rain
shadow, receive far less rainfall averaging about 1,000 mm
(40 in) bringing the average rainfall figure to 2,500 mm
(150 in). Data from rainfall figures reveal that there is no
relationship between the total amount of rain received and the
spread of the area. Some areas to the north in Maharashtra while
receiving heavier rainfall are followed by long dry spells, while
regions closer to the equator receiving less annual rainfall, have
rain spells lasting almost the entire year.
Ecoregions
[[Image:Nilgiri-Hills.jpg|thumb|
Nilgiri
Hills
(Tectona grandis) and Wattle.]]

Western Ghats near Rajapalayam
The Western Ghats are home to four
tropical and
subtropical moist broadleaf forest ecoregions – the
North Western Ghats
moist deciduous forests,
North Western Ghats
montane rain forests,
South Western Ghats
moist deciduous forests, and
South Western Ghats
montane rain forests.
The northern portion of the range is generally drier than the
southern portion, and at lower elevations makes up the North
Western Ghats moist deciduous forests ecoregion, with mostly
deciduous forests made up predominantly of
teak. Above 1,000 meters elevation are the cooler and
wetter
North
Western Ghats montane rain forests, whose evergreen forests are
characterized by trees of family
Lauraceae.
The
evergreen Wayanad
forests of Kerala mark the transition zone between
the northern and southern ecoregions of the Western Ghats.
The southern ecoregions are generally wetter and more species-rich.
At lower elevations are the
South Western Ghats
moist deciduous forests, with
Cullenia the characteristic tree genus,
accompanied by teak,
dipterocarps, and
other trees. The moist forests transition to the drier
South Deccan Plateau
dry deciduous forests, which lie in its rain shadow to the
east.
Above 1,000 meters are the
South Western Ghats
montane rain forests, also cooler and wetter than the
surrounding lowland forests, and dominated by evergreen trees,
although some
montane grasslands
and stunted forests can be found at the highest elevations. The
South Western Ghats montane rain forests are the most species-rich
ecoregion in peninsular India; eighty percent of the
flowering plant species of the entire
Western Ghats range are found in this ecoregion.
Biome Protection
Historically the Western Ghats were well-covered in dense forests
that provided wild foods and natural habitats for native
tribal people.
Its inaccessibility
made it difficult for people from the plains
to cultivate
the land and build settlements. After the arrival of the
British in the area, large
swathes of territory were cleared for agricultural plantations and
timber. The forest in the Western Ghats has been severely
fragmented due to human activities, especially clear felling for
tea, coffee, and teak plantations during 1860 to 1950. Species that
are rare, endemic and habitat specialists are more adversely
affected and tend to be lost faster than other species. Complex and
species rich habitats like the tropical rainforest are much more
adversely affected than other habitats.
The area is ecologically sensitive to development and was declared
an ecological hotspot in 1988 through the efforts of ecologist
Norman Myers. Though this area covers
barely five percent of India's land, 27% of all species of higher
plants in India (4,000 of 15,000 species) are found here. Almost
1,800 of these are
endemic to the
region. The range is home to at least 84 amphibian species, 16 bird
species, seven mammals, and 1,600 flowering plants which are not
found elsewhere in the world.
The
Government of India
established many
protected
areas including 2
biosphere reserve, 13
National parks to restrict human
access, several
wildlife
sanctuaries to protect specific endangered species and many
Reserve Forests, which are all
managed by the forest departments of their respective state to
preserve some of the ecoregions still undeveloped. Many National
Parks were initially Wildlife Sanctuaries.
The Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve
comprising 5500 km² of the evergreen forests of Nagarahole
, deciduous forests of Bandipur
National Park
and Nugu in Karnataka and adjoining regions of
Wayanad
(വയനാട്) and Mudumalai National Park
in the states of Kerala
and Tamil Nadu
forms the largest contiguous protected area in the
Western Ghats. The Western Ghats in Kerala is home to
numerous serene hill stations like Munnar
(മുന്നാര്), Ponmudi (പൊന്മുടി) and
Waynad. The Silent Valley National Park
(സൈലന്റ് വാലി) in Kerala is among the last
tracts of virgin tropical evergreen forest in India.
World Heritage Site
In 2006,
India applied to the UNESCO
MAB for the Western Ghats to be listed as a protected
World
Heritage Site. This will be composed of 7 adjoining
areas:
- Agasthyamalai Sub-Cluster (with Five Site
Elements) including: The Agasthyamalai Biosphere
Reserve
900 km², includes Kalakkad
Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve
806 km², in Tamil Nadu and Neyyar, Peppara and
Shendurney Wildlife Sanctuaries and their adjoining areas of
Achencoil, Thenmala
, Konni, Punalur
, Thiruvananthapuram
Divisions and Agasthyavanam Special Division in
Kerala.
- Periyar Sub-Cluster (with Six Site Elements)
including: Periyar
National Park
and nature reserve 777 km², in Kerala,
Ranni
, Konni
and
Achankovil Forest Divisions.
On the
eastern side, lying largely in a rain-shadow area with mostly drier
forests, lie the Srivilliputtur Wildlife
Sanctuary and reserved forests of the Tirunelveli
Forest Division.
- Anamalai Sub-Cluster (with Seven Site
Elements) including: Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary
, Eravikulam National Park
90 km², Indira
Gandhi National Park
, Grass Hills
National Park and Karian
Shola National Park are located within the larger Indira Gandhi
Wildlife Sanctuary 958 km², and Palani Hills
National Park
736.87 km² (PRO) in Tamil Nadu
and Parambikulam Wildlife
Sanctuary
285 km² in Kerala.
- Nilgiri Sub-Cluster (with Six Site Elements)
including: The Nilgiri
Biosphere Reserve with Karimpuzha National Park
230 km² (PRO), Silent
Valley National Park
89.52 km² and Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary
344 km² in Kerala, Bandipur National Park
874 km², Mukurthi National Park
78.46 km²,Mudumalai
National Park
321 km², New Amarambalam
Reserved Forest in Tamil Nadu. This
sub-cluster constitutes a largely secure forest complex of over
6,000 km², which is one of the most globally significant
conservation areas for highly threatened species such as the Asian
elephant, tiger and gaur, besides dozens of endangered species in
other taxa.
- Talakaveri Sub-Cluster (with six site
elements) including:Brahmagiri Wildlife Sanctuary
181.29 km², Rajiv Gandhi (Nagarhole National Park
) 321 km², Pushpagiri Wildlife Sanctuary
92.65 km², Talakaveri
Wildlife Sanctuary (105.01 km²) in Karnataka and Aralam
Reserved
Forest in Kerala.
- Kudremukh Sub-Cluster (with Five Site
Elements) including: Kudremukh National Park
600.32 km², Someshwara Wildlife Sanctuary
and surrounding Reserved Forests of Someshwara, Agumbe
and
Balahalli in karnataka.
- Sahyadri Sub-Cluster (with Four Site
Elements) including: Anshi National Park
340 km², Chandoli National Park
317.67 km², Koyna
Wildlife Sanctuary
and Radhanagri Wildlife Sanctuary
in Maharashtra.
Fauna
The Western Ghats are home to thousands of
animal species including at least 325 globally
threatened species. Many are
endemic species, especially in the
amphibian and reptilian
classes.
These hill ranges serve as important wildlife corridors, allowing
seasonal migration of endangered
Asian
Elephants. The Nilgiri Bio-sphere is home to the largest
population of Asian Elephants and forms an important
Project Elephant and
Project Tiger reserve.
Brahmagiri and Pushpagiri
wildlife sanctuaries are important elephant
habitats. Karnataka
's Ghat areas hold over six thousand elephants (as
of 2004) and ten percent of India's critically endangered tiger population.
The
largest population of India's Tigers outside the Sundarbans
is in the unbroken forests bordering Karnataka,
Tamil Nadu and Kerala. The largest numbers and herds of vulnerable Gaur are
found here with the Bandipur National Park
and Nagarhole together holding over five
thousand Gaur. To the west the forests of Kodagu
hold
sizeable populations of the endangered Nilgiri Langur.Bhadra Wildlife Sanctuary and
project tiger reserve in Chikmagalur
has large populations of Indian muntjac. Many Asian Elephant,
Gaur,
Sambar, vulnerable
Sloth Bears,
Leopard,
tiger and
Wild Boars dwell in the forests
of Kerala.
Bannerghatta
National Park
and Annekal reserve forest is an important elephant
corridor connecting the forests of Tamil Nadu with those of
Karnataka. Dandeli
and Anshi national parks in Uttara
Kannada
district are home to the Black Panther and normal variety of leopards and significant populations of Great Indian Hornbill.
Bhimgad
in Belgaum
district is a proposed wildlife sanctuary and
is home to the endemic critically endangered Wroughton's freetailed bat. the
Krishnapur caves close by are one of only three places in the
country where the little-known Theobald's tomb bat is found.
Large
Lesser False Vampire bats are
found in the Talevadi caves.
- Reptiles- The snake family Uropeltidae of the reptile class is almost entirely restricted to this
region.
- Amphibians- The amphibians of the Western Ghats are diverse and
unique, with more than 80% of the 179 amphibian species being
endemic to the region. Most of the endemic species have their
distribution in the rainforests of these mountains. The endangered
Purple frog was
discovered in 2003 to be a living
fossil. This species of frog is most closely related
to species found in the Seychelles
. Four new species of Anurans belonging to the genus Rhacophorus, Polypedates, Philautus
and Bufo have been described from the Western
Ghats.
- Fish- 102 species of fish are listed for the
Western Ghats water bodies. Western Ghats streams are home to
several brilliantly coloured ornamental fishes
like Red line torpedo
barb, Red-tailed
barb, Osteobrama bakeri, Günther's catfish and freshwater
puffer fish Tetraodon
travancoricus, Carinotetraodon imitator and marine
forms like Chelonodon patoca (Buchanan-Hamilton,1822); mahseers such as Malabar mahseer
- Birds- There are at least 508 bird species. Most of Karnataka's five hundred species
of birds [27524] are from the Western Ghats region. Bhadra Wildlife Sanctuary is
located at the northern end of the Malabar ranges and the southern
tip of the Sahyadri ranges and bird species from both ranges can be
seen here.
- Insects- There are roughly 6,000 insect
species from Kerala alone. Of 334 butterfly species recorded from the Western Ghats,
316 species have been reported from the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve.
- Molluscs- Seasonal rainfall patterns of the
Western Ghats necessitate a period of dormancy for its land snails,
resulting in their high abundance and diversity including at least
258 species of gastropods from 57 genera
and 24 families.
Image:Lightmatter lion-tailed macaque.jpg|
Lion-tailed macaqueImage:IndianTiger DK
BhadraWLS.jpg|Tiger at
Bhadra
Wildlife SanctuaryImage:Doppelhornvogel-09.jpg|
Great Indian HornbillImage:Columba
elphinstonii.jpg|
Nilgiri
Wood-PigeonImage:Nelliampathi-Monkey.jpg|Monkey
(Bonnet Macaque) seen in Nelliampathi
mountainsImage:Great-Hornbill.jpg|Great Hornbill
from Valparai
File:SnailWynaad.jpg| The endemic land snail
Indrella ampulla
Notes
- [1] Karnataka forest department (Forests at a
glance -Statistics)
- Myers, N., R.A. Mittermeier, C.G. Mittermeier, G.A.B. Da
Fonseca, and J. Kent. (2000) “Biodiversity Hotspots for
Conservation Priorities.” Nature 403:853–858, retrieved 6/1/2007
MYERS, N.
- Michael Bright, 1001 Natural Wonders of the World by
Barrons Educational Series Inc., Quinted Inc. Publishing,
2005.
- IMPACT OF RAINFOREST FRAGMENTATION ON SMALL MAMMALS
AND HERPETOFAUNA IN THE WESTERN GHATS, SOUTH INDIA, Ajith Kumar
,Salim Centre for Ornithology and Natural History ,Coimbatore,
India; Ravi Chellam, B.C.Choudhury, Divya Mudappa, Karthikeyan
Vasudevan, N.M.Ishwar, Wildlife Institute of India,Dehra Dun,
India; Barry Noon, Department of Fish and Wildlife Biology,
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, U.S.A., FINAL REPORT,
APRIL 2002
- [2] The Nilgiri Bio-sphere Reserve.
- Elamon Suresh (2006) "Kerala's Greatest Heritage",
YouTube video, retrieved 4/29/2007 Kerala's Greatest Heritage
- UNESCO, MAB, (2007) World Heritage sites, Tentative lists,
Western Ghats sub cluster, Retrieved 3/30/2007 [3]
- Neyyar Wildlife Sanctuary
- Peppara Wildlife Sanctuary
- Shendurney Wildlife Sanctuary
- Achencoil, Kerala
- Konni, Kerala
- Agasthyavanam Biological Park, Kerala
- Database entry includes justification for why this species is
endangered.
- Singh Mewa and Kaumanns Werner (2005) "Behavioural studies:
A necessity for wildlife management", Current Science, Vol.
89, No. 7, October 10, p.1233. Full text
- [4] Karnataka forest department, (forests at a
glance -Statistics)
- Wildlife populations in Karnataka
- [5] Bhimgad awaits government protection
- Vasudevan Karthikeyan, A Report on the Survey of Rainforest
Fragments in the Western Ghats for Amphibian Diversity,
retrieved 9/1/2007 ( Online version). Introduction]
- An evaluation of the endemism of the amphibian
assemblages from the Western Ghats using molecular techniques
Contents & Summary
- [6]
- Silas et al., (2005) Indian Journal of Fisheries,
52(2):125-140
- [7] Karnataka forest department (forests at a
glance - Bio-diversity)
- Mathew George and Binoy C.F., An Overview of Insect
Diversity of Western Ghats with Special Reference to Kerala
State, retrieved 7/24/2007. ( Online version). Brief summary of work so far carried
out on the insect fauna of Western Ghats of Kerala
- George Mathew and M. Mahesh Kumar, State of the Art
Knowledge on the Butterflies of Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve,
INDIA, retrieved 9/1/2007 ( Online version). Introduction butterfly fauna
- Madhyastha N. A., Rajendra, Mavinkurve G. and Shanbhag Sandhya
P., Land Snails of Western Ghats, retrieved 9/1/2007 (
Online version) Introduction Molluscs
References
* A Rendezvous with Sahyadri
Harshal Mahajan
- Wikramanayake, Eric; Eric Dinerstein; Colby J. Loucks; et al.
(2002). Terrestrial Ecoregions of the Indo-Pacific: a
Conservation Assessment. Island Press; Washington, DC
.
* Trek the Sahyadris Harish
Kapadia
- Karnataka forest Department- National Parks and
WLS
- R.J. Ranjit, Wildlife institute of India, "Biodiversity
in the Western Ghats"
- Ajith Kumar, Sálim
Ali Centre for Ornithology and Natural History, Coimbatore,
India, Ravi Chellam, B.C.Choudhury, Divya Mudappa, Karthikeyan
Vasudevan, N.M.Ishwar, Wildlife Institute of India, Dehra Dun,
India, Barry Noon, Department of Fish and Wildlife Biology,
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, U.S.A. (2002) "Impact
of Rainforest Fragmentation on Small Mammals and Herpetofauna in
the Western Ghats, South India", Final Report, pp. 146, illus. Full textretrieved 3/14/2007
* List of Butterflies
recorded from the Western Ghats
- Verma Desh Deepak (2002) "Thematic Report on Mountain
Ecosystems", Ministry of Environment and Forests,13pp,
retrieved 3/27/2007 Thematic Report on Mountain EcosystemsFull text,
detailed data, not cited.
- Abstracts, Edited by Lalitha Vijayan, SACONR. Vasudeva,
University of Dharwad, Priyadarsanan, ATREE, Renee Borges, CES,
ISSC, Jagdish Krishnaswamy, ATREE & WCSP. Pramod, SACON,
Jagannatha Rao, R., FRLHTR. J. Ranjit Daniels, Care Earth, Compiled
by S. Somasundaram, SACON (1-2 December 2005) Integrating Science and Management of Biodiversity in
the Western Ghats, 2nd National Conference of the Western
Ghats Forum, Venue: State Forest Service College Coimbatore,
Organized by Sálim
Ali Centre for Ornithology and Natural History, Anaikatty,
Coimbatore – 641108, INDIA. Sponsored by Ministry of Environment
and Forests, Government of India. Supported by The Arghyam
Foundation, The Ford Foundation & Sir Dorabiji Trust Through
Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE)
External links