Money is spent on conserving tiger and rhino, every other species left to fend for itself: Shekar Dattatri

Having spent decades as a wildlife and conservation filmmaker, Shekar Dattatri can’t but be an exasperated realist when it comes to the situation on the ground, where smaller species are being wiped off by human developmental pressures, bigger animals are being shunted around, and the all-too familiar situation where rules exist but not the will to implement them.

By :  migrator
Update: 2018-10-07 00:04 GMT
Shekar Dattatri

Chennai

DT NEXT: You have been a resident of capital Chennai how as things changed with the bird life and the local extinction of small mammals.

Shekar Dattatri: In 1979, I had enumerated more than 120 species of birds in the Tiruvanmiyur region, which was a new suburb in those days. Today, it would be difficult to find more than 25-30 species consistently.  During the same year, I found 11 species of amphibians. Today, it would be hard to find more than 2 or 3.  Small mammals like mongooses and civets could only be seen in certain parts of the city before, and they still persist in small numbers here and there, thanks to their adaptability.

Calls seeking rescue of snakes is common in Chennai. Can humans and snakes co-exist?

Snakes of all kinds can and do co-exist with humans in rural areas, and have done so for millennia.  However, it is unrealistic to expect such co-existence in confined urban areas. If they are not removed, they will be killed by someone.

What is your take on rescue of stray animals, particularly elephants and leopards?

First of all, there is no such thing as a stray wild animal! All the land that we humans now inhabit was once the domain of wild animals. The human population explosion and the spreading of our footprint to even the remotest corners of the world has turned wild animals into refugees in their own land. So, now, when they venture anywhere near human habitation, we term them as “straying wild animals”.  Be that as it may, any “rescue” of these so called “stray animals” should only be done on the basis of good science. Presently, this is rarely the case, and animals are trapped willy-nilly, in a knee-jerk reaction to public pressure. The poor “rescued” animal is then dumped in some unfamiliar territory, causing it tremendous stress. This does not solve any problems of conflict but only transfers the problem to another area. Also, we can’t club all wild animals in the same category, as they all have different habitat requirements and different behavioural traits. So, all solutions have to be species-specific and site-specific if they are to have some chance of success.

During Operation Malai in 2013, a herd of six elephants were moved away from Tiruvannamalai forest. What would be the impact on the landscape when such an important animal is removed?

Ecological changes that result from the removal of a small population of a particular species from a particular landscape can often only be discerned over a long period of study. Therefore, it is impossible to say what the impact of removing six elephants from the Tiruvannamalai forests will have on the ecosystem as a whole. What we do know is that elephants often modify the landscape in a way that benefits many other wildlife species. They are also important seed dispersal agents and play an important role in maintaining the equilibrium of the ecosystems they live in.

Can you name a few small animals that are facing habitat threat, and the impact of biotic pressure on them?

The Great Indian bustard, which was once found in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Rajasthan and many other states, is now virtually extinct due to a variety of factors, including hunting, massive loss of grassland habitat and severe biotic pressures in the last remaining habitats. Vultures numbered in the millions even until the early 1990s, but declined by more than 95 per cent due the use of a drug called Diclofenac in livestock. When vultures fed on the carcasses of animals that contained residues of the drug, they died. Blackbuck antelopes used to roam by the tens of thousands in the plains of India even 50-60 years ago. Today, most of their habitat is gone due to agricultural expansion, urbanisation and industrialisation, and their numbers have plummeted. This is the story with hundreds of species in India.

There are literature and books attributing to movement of tigers in Kodaikanal town and Vandalur reserve forest some 50 years ago. But not anymore. Can the leopards and tigers return?

Yes, but only if humans in these places are wiped out en masse as a result of some pandemic or natural disaster, and these urbanised areas revert to nature over time!

Is the Central and State governments working enough to fight local extinction?

India once had a great ethos of reverence towards nature. We have excellent wildlife protection laws. But the sad truth is that governments, both in states and at the centre, regard wildlife conservation as an impediment to development. While a lot of lip service is paid to conservation, the reality on the ground is one of rampant degradation and destruction of the last remaining wilderness areas of our beautiful country. While a lot of money is spent on conserving a few charismatic animals like the tiger and the rhino, virtually every other species has been left to fend for itself. We should be greatly ashamed.

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