Reference Text
Time Left10:00
The
Supreme
Court's
order
to
seal
and
close
27
resorts
operating
in
corridors
used
by
elephants
in
the
Nilgiris
is
a
necessary
step
to
restore
the
ecology
of
these
spaces.
Weak
regulation
of
ecotourism
is
severely
impacting
important
habitats,
and
affecting
animals
that
have
large
home
ranges,
like
elephants.
Fragmentation
of
forests
makes
it
all
the
more
important
to
preserve
migratory
corridors.
The
movement
of
elephants
is
essential
to
ensure
that
their
populations
are
genetically
viable,
and
help
regenerate
forests
on
which
other
species,
including
tigers,
depend.
Ending
human
interference
in
the
pathways
of
elephants
is
a
conservation
imperative,
more
so
because
the
animals
are
then
not
forced
to
seek
alternative
routes
that
bring
them
into
conflict
with
people.
Forests
that
have
turned
into
farms
and
unbridled
tourism
are
blocking
their
paths,
resulting
in
growing
incidents
of
elephant-human
conflict.
These
encounters
claim
the
lives
of
about
450
people
and
lead
to
the
death
of
nearly
100
elephants
in
retaliatory
actions
every
year
on
average.
A
review
of
elephant
corridors
published
by
the
Wildlife
Trust
of
India
jointly
with
the
Environment
Ministry's
Project
Elephant
last
year
indicates
that
there
are
101
such
identified
pathways,
of
which
almost
70%
are
used
regularly.
Nearly
three-quarters
of
the
corridors
are
evenly
divided
among
southern,
central
and
northeastern
forests,
while
the
rest
are
found
in
northwest
Bengal
and
the
northwestern
region.
Some
of
these
passages
are
precariously
narrow,
at
only
a
hundred
metres
wide.
These
landscape
characteristics,
and
the
evidence
that
there
are
an
estimated
6,500
elephants
in
just
the
Brahmagiri-Nilgiris-Eastern
Ghats
ranges,
call
for
complete
protection
of
the
routes
they
regularly
use.
Surprisingly,
the
District
Collector's
report
on
39
resorts
in
the
Nilgiris
points
to
their
having
come
up
right
under
the
gaze
of
the
Forest
Department,
the
majority
without
the
requisite
permissions.
This
must
be
thoroughly
investigated
to
check
whether
there
was
any
wrongdoing.
The
grey
area
of
mushrooming
home-
stay
structures,
which
are
just
hotels
on
forest
fringes,
also
deserves
scrutiny.
But
more
importantly,
the
effort
should
be
to
expand
elephant
corridors,
using
the
successful
models
within
the
country,
including
acquisition
of
lands
using
private
funds
and
their
transfer
to
the
government.
Among
the
major
factors
affecting
conservation,
two
need
quick
remedies:
about
40%
of
elephant
reserves
are
vulnerable,
as
they
are
not
within
protected
parks
and
sanctuaries;
and
the
corridors
have
no
specific
legal
protection.
Illegal
structures
in
these
pathways
should
be
removed
without
delay.
The
Supreme
Court's
order
to
seal
and
close
27
resorts
operating
in
corridors
used
by
elephants
in
the
Nilgiris
is
a
necessary
step
to
restore
the
ecology
of
these
spaces.
Weak
regulation
of
ecotourism
is
severely
impacting
important
habitats,
and
affecting
animals
that
have
large
home