New species hotspot

At least 353 new species have been discovered in the Eastern Himalayas between 1998 and 2008, according to a new report by WWF. This translates to an average of 35 new species finds every year through the last decade — an astounding figure! What’s more, there are two new intriguing mammals among these new species — a flying frog and the world’s smallest deer. The bright green frog uses its long red webbed feet to glide in the air, and the miniature muntjac or leaf deer is just over two feet tall. And there’s a colour changing flower too which goes from blue to purple when temperatures soar!

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Photo caption: The deer, the flying frog & the colour changing flower. Courtesy: WWF

Small wonder that such a treasure trove exists since the largely inaccessible landscape of the Eastern Himalayas remains unexplored. The difficult terrain makes it a Herculean task to plan and execute biological surveys.

Expeditions to the region have unraveled 244 plants, 16 amphibians, 16 reptiles, 14 fish, 2 birds and 2 mammals, and at least 61 new invertebrates. The finds are spread over the Himalayas in Bhutan, north-eastern India, northern Myanmar, Nepal and southern Tibet.

The region harbours a staggering array of species, says the ‘New Species report’: 10,000 plants, 300 mammals, 977 bird species, 176 reptiles, 105 amphibians and 269 freshwater fish. The Eastern Himalayas are also home to many of the remaining Bengal tigers and are the last bastion of the greater one-horned rhino.

The findings, WWF contends, come with a warning that this important hotspot of biological diversity is most at risk from climate change, what with rapid glacial water retreats. The organisation has urged governments attending the climate change talks in Copenhagen this December to commit industrialised countries to a 40% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020. It also suggests that the governments of Bhutan, India and Nepal, develop a shared three-country vision and a “unified conservation and sustainable development plan that ensures the connectivity of landscapes within the Eastern Himalayas, allowing for the free movement of wildlife across

political borders and combating illegal trade at a regional level.”

Ice, ice water

Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and NASA performed a joint experiment today in the hope of getting some more insight into the possibility of existence of ice in a permanently shadowed crater near the North pole of the moon, according to ISRO sources.

The bi-static experiment involved ISRO’s Chandrayaan-1 and NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft — both presently orbiting the moon. The two spacecraft, equipped with a NASA miniature radio frequency instrument, passed close enough to one another when they were over the lunar North pole to attempt this interesting experiment.

Chandrayaan-1 transmitted the signals and LRO received them. The experiment used both radars to point at the Erlanger Crater at the same time. The two instruments looked at the same location from different angles.

ISRO sources say, comparing the signal that bounces straight back to Chandrayaan-1 with the signal that bounces at a slight angle to LRO provides unique information about the lunar surface. The experiment data is being analysed by scientists of both agencies.

Here’s hoping for some exciting results!

Pluck an innovation

I read with sheer delight this piece of news from Kerala, the coconut country. The state’s industries minister Elamaram Kareem has gone public with the urgency to fulfill a long-standing need of his people –- a state-of-the-art coconut plucking machine! The Kerala government has announced an award of one million rupees for anyone who comes up with a commercially viable coconut plucking machine.

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For those of us from coastal states, the sight of a loincloth-clad coconut plucker expertly scaling the tall tree is common. But apparently, there’s a dearth of such skilled manpower across the coastal state, where coconuts are ripe for the picking every 45 days. My colleague Jacob Thomas, from God’s own country, tells me that earlier the climbers used to charge three rupees to climb up once and bring back the bounty. Blame the inflation for this, but today’s coconut pluckers would settle for nothing less than twenty five rupees per climb!

Earlier the government tried to meet this acute shortage of tree climbers and farmhands in the state by setting up a training school for coconut-plucking and tree climbing. In Kerala, a large large number of coconut-pluckers are actually from the coastal state of West Bengal or from Bihar. The state has over 16 crore coconut trees while most villages have only one or two climbers, grossly insufficient during harvest time. However, the plan to create a pool of trained agricultural workers does seem to have clicked. Some experiments with ad-hoc machines have also not yielded much result.

So the only way forward is innovation! It is coincidental that Raghunath Anant Mashelkar wrote on Nature India recently why innovation has to be at the forefront for a country with such peculiar needs — the need for a national innovation ecosystem.

I will be happy to hear such need-based innovation stories from all corners of this huge country. Have you heard of an innovation that has changed the lives of the people around you?

Gene advantage

Amidst the sorry stories we hear about dwindling (and mostly non-existent) tiger populations across tiger reserves in India, there was something to cheer during the long Independence Day weekend as Indian scientists demonstrated the invaluable genetic diversity of the subcontinent’s big cats.

Samrat Mondol and Uma Ramakrishnan of the National Centre for Biological Sciences, Bangalore, along with K. Ullas Karanth of the Wildlife Conservation Society, New York and Centre for Wildlife Studies, Bangalore urged through their study that conservation efforts “must prioritise regions that harbor more tigers, as well try to capture most of the remaining genetic variation and habitat diversity.” Nature India research highlight.

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Will they grow up to admire these stripes in paintings alone?

Only such prioritisation based on demographic, genetic, and ecological considerations can ensure species recovery and retention of evolutionary flexibility in the face of ongoing global changes, they say.

As widely reported now in the media, thanks to the ever growing concern for the tiger, the trio sampled 73 individual tigers from 28 reserves spread across the Indian subcontinent to find that Indian tigers retain more than half of the extant genetic diversity in the species. Their results suggest that only 1.7% (with an upper limit of 13% and a lower limit of 0.2%) of tigers from historical times remain now.

In an analysis of the study, Oliver A. Ryder of San Diego Zoo’s Institute for Conservation Research in California, USA, says the team’s proposal merits serious consideration, but the realities of providing sufficient habitat for expanding tiger populations should also be calculated into global efforts for tiger conservation.

I spotted a blog post by Anne-Marie Hodge, an undergraduate in biological sciences at Auburn University, Alabama, USA, who raised some rather interesting points on what to make of the genetic diversity issue. I am tempted to quote her from her Nature Network blog here:

“I am increasingly concerned that the public will get the impression that we can claim conservation success merely by preserving genetic diversity. Much has been made of ‘minimum viable populations,’ ‘maximum sustainable yield,’ and the like, with too little regard for the integrity and function of food-webs, and the resulting impacts on not only predators and prey but the ecosystem as a whole. Humans had been doing their best to eradicate large carnivores long before our historical and scientific records began. We would not know how large Indian tiger populations were several centuries ago if analyses like the ones in the current PLoS paper did not allow us to create estimates from molecular evidence. This makes it extremely hard to set appropriate goals for conservation and management plans.

Even if we had a complete tiger genome on hand, it would not do much good if the animals are relegated to zoo cages or small ecotourism resorts. Even if a token number of animals are allowed to roam in the wild, the species would simply be lingering as a present and yet enfeebled shade of its former self, with its role in community interactions and regulation essentially paralysed.

Genetic diversity is still a crucial factor, and the results of this paper are both important and fascinating. This information gives us further clues as to the size and distribution of historic tiger populations, which can lead to further analyses of predator-prey relationships and ecosystem interactions. The news about the remaining genetic diversity is encouraging; inbreeding depression can potentially prevent species from ever recovering from extremely low population numbers, even if their habitat is restored.”

I wonder what Indian conservation experts have to say on the way forward from this important scientific finding. Also, whether this will affect any policy changes in the existing conservation roadmap of the country’s big cats.

Bhuvan on terra firma

I just checked out the much-hyped beta version of Bhuvan, India’s answer to Google Earth, and have to say it will need some more meat under its skin to make a true impact. I am sure the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) will go live with the final version only when it if fully satisfied, what with all the hoopla surrounding it. Or at least lend an ear to feedback from users.

For starters, despite its promise to be ‘bandwidth-friendly’, the time taken to open Bhuvan’s homepage itself faces stiff competition from Google Earth. And now that Google has Caffeine under its belt, it’s all the more reason why ISRO needs to buck up! Also the site opens on internet explorer and is flash enabled only leaving users like me who prefer Firefox or javascript looking at a blank screen or being prompted to click on more buttons.

However, ISRO itself is not as competition conscious since it feels Bhuvan is a niche product specific to India.

Competition or not, the promise of Bhuvan sounds fairly good: better 3-D satellite imagery of India than available now on the web, country weather information as well as administrative boundaries of states and districts. There are interactive tools on offer for you to measure, draw, save and print information. The images are from the Indian Remote Sensing (IRS) satellites and there’s talk of providing real time images as well, though how it would be achieved is apparently still being worked out.

With Bhuvan, ISRO will try to get the Indian record straight on political and territorial boundaries while protecting strategic data — a bone of contention between Google Earth and the Indian government on a number of occasions.

Feedback welcome.