Showing posts with label Meghalaya State. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meghalaya State. Show all posts

Monday, 13 January 2020

Cuon alpinus: Understanding the distribution of Dholes in northeast India.

The Dhole, or Asian Wild Dog, Cuon alpinus, is an Endangered social carnivore found in forested landscapes of South and Southeast Asia. Historically widespread across Asia, the species’ range has contracted by about 80%. The current distribution extends across most of South and Southeast Asia and parts of China but is largely restricted to protected areas. The protected forest landscapes south of the River Ganges in India are a stronghold for the species, with the largest Dhole population. However, the species has undergone local extirpation across parts of its former range as a result of declines of prey species, loss of habitat and, potentially, disease. Information on Dholes in northeast India in particular is limited, despite the fact that this landscape shares continuous forest with Myanmar and Southeast Asia, forming an important part of the species' global range.

A Dhole, or Asian Wild Dog, Cuon alpinus. David Raju/Wikimedia Commons.

In a paper published in the journal Orynx on 23 October 2019, Priya Singh of Researchers for Wildlife Conservation at the National Centre for Biological Sciences, and the School of Natural Resources and Environment at the University of Florida, Arjun Srivastha of the Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation at the University of Florida, and David Macdonald of the Wildlife Conservation Research Unit at the University of Oxford, provide a compilation of dhole presence records from across northeast India using data extracted from multiple sources.

Current knowledge of Dholes in north-east India is restricted to landscapes north of the River Brahmaputra. This is primarily because of the paucity of baseline ecological data from the region, given its undulating terrain, difficulty of access, wet climatic conditions, and socio-political insurgencies.

Using data from camera-trap surveys Singh et al. examine factors influencing fine-scale site-use by Dholes in Dampa Tiger Reserve in Mizoram State. They discuss the implications of their results for Dhole conservation in northeast India, where the focus of wildlife managers is directed mainly towards population recoveries of and local recolonisation by the Tiger, Panthera tigris. They further provide recommendations for management interventions that could facilitate conservation of Dholes in this hitherto neglected landscape.

Dampa Tiger Reserve lies in the Indo-Myanmar Biodiversity Hotspot. The reserve is contiguous with the Chittagong Hill Tract region of Bangladesh to the west. The core area of the Reserve covers 500 km², and the multi-use buffer covers an area of 488 km². The Lushai Hills traverse the reserve, with altitudes of 250-1100 m. Mean annual rainfall is 2000-2500 mm. The Reserve supports a high diversity of Carnivores, including, in addition to the Dhole, four species of Felids and two species of Ursids. In the course of the study Singh et al. also recorded the Elephant, Elephas maximus, Gaur, Bos gaurus, Sambar, Rusa unicolor, Red Serow, Capricornis rubidus, Muntjac, Muntiacus muntjak, and Wild Pig, Sus scrofa.

Northeast India, with the Dampa Tiger Reserve in Mizoram and locations where the Dhole, Cuon alpinus, has been recorded, with corresponding reliability scores. Singh et al. (2019).

Singh et al. compiled Dhole presence records for nine northeastern states: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim, Tripura, and West Bengal. They searched for records from 1990 onwards in newspaper reports, scientific articles, grey literature (including species checklists), and reports by Forest Department personnel, local informants and naturalists working in the region. For each record they noted the type of evidence (direct/indirect), the date of the sighting, the administrative status of location (protected/non-protected), and the source person or reference. They assigned reliability scores for each record, from 1 to 5, with 1 being most reliable, and 5 least reliable.

From December 2014 to March 2015, Singh et al. deployed 79 pairs of Cuddeback Ambush IR camera traps across 80 km² in the northeast of Dampa Tiger Reserve’s core area. At each station they placed two cameras facing each other, about 30 cm above the ground, on either side of forest trails or on riverbeds. Mean inter-trap distance was 1.02 km, with traps remaining active for an average of 64 days. Although the stations were intended to photograph wild Felids, they also photographed other Carnivores. Dholes generally use forest trails and riverbeds for movement, marking territories and hunting, and our sampling design therefore incorporated areas used by the species.

Singh et al. obtained presence records from 80 locations for 1990-2018, of which we considered 41 records from 2010–2018 with reliability scores of 1-3. In the case of multiple records for the same site, they considered the most recent record with the highest reliability score. Most records were from Arunachal Pradesh (14) and Assam (8), with five records from Mizoram and Nagaland, four from West Bengal, three from Meghalaya and two from Sikkim. There were no recent records of Dholes from Manipur and Tripura. A total of 5033 camera trap-days in Dampa Tiger Reserve generated 500 photoencounters of Dholes, comprising 92 detections (one per 24 hour duration) across 33 sites. 

Singh et al. found photo-capture frequencies of key prey species: Sambar (236), Muntjac (145), Wild Pig (92); to be positive influences, as were the distance to reserve boundary, and photo-capture frequencies of Forest Department personnel, while photo-capture frequencies of other humans were  negative influences on site-use by Dholes.

There are records of Dholes across several areas of northeast India, including in unprotected areas. Previous global assessments indicated that the species faced near or complete local extirpation to the south of the River Brahmaputra, something refuted by Sigh et al.'s findings from Dampa Tiger Reserve. Corroborating current knowledge from other landscapes, showed a positive relationship between Dhole site-use and Sambar presence. Across their extant distribution, the range of Dholes overlaps with that of Tigers and Leopards, Panthera pardus. Wildlife managers in this region and elsewhere subscribe to unsubstantiated notions that dhole presence impedes colonisation by Tigers, and consequently treat Dholes as a problem species. On the contrary, Tigers, Leopards and Dholes can co-exist provided protected areas support adequate densities of medium- to large-sized prey species.

Dampa Tiger Reserve is an important refuge for Dholes in northeast India. It supports large tracts of inviolate protected spaces, and habitat connectivity with forested landscapes of the Chittagong Hill Tract region to the west, Mamit Forest Division to the north and Thorangtlang Wildlife Sanctuary to the south. Singh et al's camera-trap data indicate the presence of a guild of large herbivores in the Reserve, with at least five prey species of medium and large ungulate herbivores, facilitating the long-term persistence of dholes there. The findings re-emphasise the importance of protected areas, which can serve as source sites for sustaining Dhole populations across the region.

In areas with low prey densities, carnivores may have significant dependence on livestock, and are consequently stigmatised. There is a strong negative relationship between Dholes and livestock owners in Arunachal Pradesh and other locations in the region. Given that Dholes also occur outside protected areas in this region, they are potentially vulnerable to retributory killing. Negative interactions between people and Dholes necessitate interventions to reduce poaching and facilitate recovery of prey, especially for species such as Sambar that are impacted by low recovery rates following prolonged poaching. Singh et al.'s findings need to be augmented with a systematic survey across the locations they identified, specifically in the states of Mizoram and Nagaland, to facilitate a pan-northeast India strategy for Dhole conservation.

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/08/leopard-attack-thwarted-by-dog-in.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/08/camper-attacked-by-wolf-in-banff.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/07/worker-at-western-australian-gold-mine.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2016/08/cynarctus-wangi-new-species-of.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2016/07/photogrammetry-as-tool-in-morphometric.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2016/04/lycaon-pictus-african-hunting-dogs.html
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Friday, 14 December 2018

Thirteen feared dead after illegal 'rat hole' mine floods in Meghalaya State, India.

Thirteen people are feared to have died after an illegal coal mine flooded in the East Jaintia Hills District of Meghalaya State in northeastern India on Thursday 13 December 2018. Local authorities are tyring to pump water out of the mine with a view to mounting a rescue bid, but it is feared that there is little hope that any of the miners will be found alive. The mine is located in the village of Ksan, close to the River Lytein, and is reported to have flooded when the waters of the river rose, causing it to burst its banks.

Rescue workers outside a flooded mine in the East Jaintia Hills of Meghalaya State on Friday 14 December 2018. CNN.

The mine is of a type known locally as a 'rat hole', due to the small nature of the entrance holes, in which miners dig into the side of a hill using hand tools, until they reach a seam of valuable minerals, usually coal, but limestone, kaolin, clay, granite, glass sand, and uranium ore are also sometimes excavated in this way. Mines of this type were banned in Meghalaya State in 2014, following an incident in 2012 in which fifteen miners perished, but they are still widely dug by local owners and villagers.

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/07/landslide-kills-nin-in-manipur-india.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/06/flooding-kills-23-in-northeastern-india.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/05/landslip-at-mizoram-quarry-kills-four.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/12/landslide-kills-three-in-chittagong.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/11/woman-killed-in-landslide-at-illegal.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/10/elephants-kill-four-rohingya-refugees.html
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Friday, 8 December 2017

Tupistra khasiana: A new species of rock-dwelling plant from Meghalaya State, India.

The genus Tupistra comprises about 27 species of Lily-like herbaceous Monocots closely related to Aspadistras, found across the Himalayan region, India, China, and Southeast Asia. They are rhizomatous plants (plants with a persistent, fleshy, creeping root, which produces stems, leaves and flowers during a growing season, then dies back to the root out of season), that often grow as lithphytes (i.e. on exposed rock faces).

In a paper published in the journal Taiwania on 11 July 2017, Dilip Kumar Roy and Ashiho Mao of the Eastern Regional Centre of the Botanical Survey of India, and Leonid Averyanov of the Komarov Botanical Institute of the Russian Academy of Science, describe a new species of Tupistra from the East Khasi Hills of Meghalaya State in India.

The new species is named Tupistra khasiana, in honour of the Khasi people of the Khasi Hills of Meghalaya State, for their contributions to the preservation of the biodiversity of the region, through the preservation of sacred groves. The species is a lithophytic perennial herb producing leaves up to 50 cm in length, producing purple and green flowers in October and December.

Tupistra khasiana. (A) Habit. (B) & (C) Rhizomatous stem with inflorescence. (D) Inflorescence. (E) Bract. (F) Bracteole. (G) Flower, side view. (H) Sagittal section of flower. (I) Flattened perianth, adaxial surface with stamens. (J) Flattened perianth, abaxial surface. (K) Anther. (L) Pistil. (M) Ovary, side view. (N) Ovary, transversal section. Roy et al. (2017).

See also...

http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2017/11/coelogyne-magnifica-new-species-of.htmlhttp://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2017/11/musa-paramjitiana-new-species-of-banana.html
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2017/09/thismia-nigricoronata-new-species-of.htmlhttp://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2017/09/gelidocalamus-xunwuensis-new-species-of.html
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2017/08/coelogyne-putaoensis-new-species-of.htmlhttp://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2017/08/zingiber-alba-new-species-of-ginger.html
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Sunday, 20 October 2013

A new species of Cicada from Meghalaya State in northeast India.

Cicadas (Cicadoidea) are large members of the True Bug order (Hemiptera) related to Leafhoppers and Spittlebugs. Male Cicadas produce a loud song, similar to that of Crickets, when seeking a mate, though this song is produced in a quite different way, by vibrating special membranes on the Insect's abdomen rather than by rubbing limbs or wings together. Nevertheless this habit, combined with the large size of Cicadas, has led to them being referred to colloquially as Crickets or Locusts in many parts of the world. Cicadas have an unusual life cycle, living out most of their lives as a burrowing juvenile, then emerging on mass as adults to reproduce after a period of time specific to the species; one North American species only emerging at seventeen year intervals.

In a paper published in the journal Zootaxa on 29 August 2013, Sudhanya Hajong of the Centre for Insects Systematic at the Department of Zoology at North-Eastern Hill University and Salmah Yaakop of the School of Environmental and Natural Resource Sciences at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia describe a new species of Cicada from Meghalaya State in northeast India. 

The new species is placed in the genus Chremistica, and given the specific name ribhoi, after the Ri Bhoi District of Meghalaya, where it was discovered. Chremistica ribhoi is a 25-28 mm black and brown Cicada with a four-year life-cycle; it last emerged in May 2010 and 2006. It was found living at two sites, near Siden and Lailad villages, both in Ri Bhoi District, and is apparently well known to the local population, who regard it as a useful food animal.

Chremistica ribhoi, male specimen. Hajong & Yaakop (2013).

The approximate location of the area where Chremistica ribhoi was discovered. Google Maps.


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Thursday, 4 October 2012

Two new species of Ant from northwest India.

Ants of the genus Tetramorium are one of the most successful and and numerous groups of Ants, with nearly 500 species described globally. They are at their most abundant in tropical Africa, where there are at least 230 described species, but are common throughout the Old World. Only 13 species have been described from the Americas. The common European Pavement Ant (Tetramorium caespitum) is a member of the genus.

In a paper published in the journal ZooKeys on 11 July 2012, Himender Bharti and Rakesh Kumar of the Department of Zoology & Environmental Sciences at Punjabi University announce the discovery of two new species within the genus Tetramorium from India, and in addition the discovery of three species in northwest India not previously recorded within that part of the country.

The first new species described is named Tetramorium shivalikense, after the Shivalik Mountains where the Ants were discovered. The Ants were found in Himachal Pradesh, Punjab and Uttarakhand States, living in soil and leaf litter. The species is described on the basis of 101 worker Ants, found at altitudes of between 420 and 1140 m. Neither the queen nor the male Ants were discovered.

Worker of Tetramorium shivalikense in lateral view. Bharti & Kumar (2012).

The second new species described is named Tetramorium triangulatum, a name which refers to the triangular propodeal spines (spines on the back of the thorax) of the Ants. This species is also from the Shivalik Mountains, and was collected from soil samples in Himachal Pradesh, Punjab and Uttarakhand States, at altitudes of between 250 and 940 m. The species is described from 48 workers, 25 queens and 32 male Ants.

Tetramorium triangulatum worker (top), male (middle) and queen (bottom). Bharti & Kumar (2012).

The first species described from northwest India for the first time is Tetramorium caldarium, a tramp species (species spread widely around the world by human behavior) previously known from Germany, Kenya, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Norfolk Island, Rajastan, Jaipur, Mauritius, Madeira, Cape Verde, Great Britain, New Caledonia, Egypt, Sudan, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, St Helena, USA, Mexico, Puerto Rica, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Columbia, Brazil and Peru. The species is reported in Punjab State from a single worker Ant found on disturbed ground in Patiala.

Tetramorium caldarium worker. Bharti & Kumar (2012).

The second species found in the area for the first time is Tetramorium tonganum, which was found to be fairly widespread in the Shivalik Mountains, being collected from a number of sites in Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand. Worker, queen and male ants were all discovered, and the male of the species described for the first time. The species has previously been described from Tonga, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Japan, The Philippines and a number of Pacific islands.

 Tetramorium tonganum worker (top), queen (middle) and male (bottom). Bharti & Kumar (2012).

The final species recorded is Tetramorium urbanii, previously described from Bhutan and now described in India for the first time, from two workers found in Shillong in Meghalaya State in the northwest of India.

Tetramorium urbanii worker. Bharti & Kumar (2012).

See also Ants in the diet of a Cambodian Pitcher PlantNew species of Ghost Ant named after Edward O. Wilson and Evidence of fungal parasites modifying the behavior of ants from the Eocene Messel Shale.

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