
Activists pitch for wildlife sanctuary status for Pakkamalai- Gangavaram hills region
The Hindu
It is an ecologically important area in the eastern ghats, says a naturalist
Conservationists in Villupuram district and many from neighbouring Puducherry, have sought better protection for the Pakkamalai and Gangavaram hills, a biodiversity-rich area near Gingee in the district, and reiterated the demand to declare the area encompassing over 7,000 hectares into a wildlife sanctuary.
“Pakkamalai and Gangavaram should be notified as a wildlife sanctuary not because it has large mammals including leopards and sloth bears but because of its strategic location. It is an ecologically important area in the eastern ghats. Declarating it as a wildlife sanctuary will certainly help protect the endangered flora and fauna in the long run apart from initiating conservation activities,” said S. Vimalraj, a naturalist of Puducherry-based Indigenous Biodiversity Foundation (IBF).
The demand for notifying Gingee hills a wildlife sanctuary was first mooted in 2019. The area was first notified as a Reserve Forest in 1897 and since then it has given protection to the flora and fauna found here.
Pakkamalai and Gangavaram have a rich wealth of biodiversity and are a geographically important area in the eastern ghats. The forests have a good population of grizzled giant squirrel, grey langur, Pangolin, and the critically endangered golden gecko listed under Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972.
The grizzled giant squirrel was first discovered from Pakkamalai in 2019 by a team led by Mr. Vimalraj and K. Raman, founder of IBF. About 300 nests were identified by them.
“Rich assemblage of tropical birds including cave nests of yellow-throated bulbul, Nagarjuna Sagar racer snake, Leschenaus snake eye lizard, and Gooty tarantula have also been recorded here. More than 3,000 individuals of amphibians and reptiles from 15 families and 56 species have been recorded from Gingee hills,” he says.
“There have also been recorded findings of Bamboo pit viper and Gunthers toad, one of the most poorly known endemic toad, apart from rare sightings of large carnivores like leopards and sloth bears and different species of cave bats. About 21 endemic plant species like the Adhatodasengiana and Drypetes porteri have also been recorded in the hills,” according to an official in the Forest Department.













