4 wednesday,june30,2010 times city …

1
TIMES CITY * THE TIMES OF INDIA, MUMBAI WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 2010 4 ‘Mangroves near Dahisar will die soon’ V i j u B | TNN Mumbai: The latest report by the committee appointed by the Mumbai suburban collec- tor exposes the massive de- struction of mangroves at Dahisar adjoining Gorai creek. The report (a copy of which is with TOI) notes that the land holder of survey number 344 carried out large scale destruction of man- groves and obstructed the natural flow of salt water in the mangrove area. Due to this, the vegetation and man- groves here will die soon, the report stated. On Monday, Union minis- ter Jairam Ramesh had said that the ministry of envi- ronment and forests (MoEF) had written to the state chief minister, Ashok Chavan, ask- ing the government to take action against violators. The report was compiled by a six-member team com- prising senior forest and civic officials who visited the area following complaints from residents. It was ob- served that debris was being dumped all along the bund portion. “The bund was con- structed by digging out the mud for the surrounding creek filled with mangroves,’’ the report said. The report also observed that that the land holder had submitted the completion re- port, but the bund was being filled the help of donkeys. A senior official said that though permission was giv- en only for repairing bunds, the land holder had extend- ed the bunds and dumped de- bris over mangroves in gross violation of the Bombay high court order. “The Borivali-Dahisar stretch has seen one of the biggest encroachments in re- cent times, with hundreds of acres of mangroves destroyed on the banks of Vasai creek,’’ said Harish Pandey, member, IC Colony New Link Road Residents’ Forum. There are around 1,200 acres of mangroves adjoin- ing the Gorai creek, of which hundreds of acres have dis- appeared due to encroach- ments. “Massive filling is seen along the boundary of survey number 344. The ex- isting bund has been widened up to about 8-9 m. The mangroves along the bund were buried under the debris,’’ the report said. The report noted that cul- verts and gates have blocked the entry of tidal water in the plot and there was no provi- sion given to these gates to regulate the entry of water. BMC gets tough on litterbugs S h a r a d V y a s | TNN Mumbai: Over two weeks after the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) announced to crack the whip and penalise citi- zens and commercial shop owners found clogging nul- lahs meant to carry rain- water into the sea, the civic clean-up drive has now gathered momentum. Taking the issue of keep- ing nullahs free of blockages seriously, the BMC teams have fined over 146 industri- al units as well as individu- als for throwing rubbish into the nullahs in the last 12 days. The collective fine amount stands at Rs 1.35 lakh, said officials. “Of these, at least 12 were individuals who were caught and fined for throw- ing waste into the drains in the eastern suburbs; the drives were carried out by our teams in the mornings,’’ said a senior civic official in-charge of the drive. In his announcement on June 12, municipal comms- sioner Swadheen Kshatriya had said that the BMC had had enough. “No matter how much we clean the drains, people keep throwing waste into them every day,’’ Ksha- triya had said. Most of the action took place in eastern suburbs; at Kurla, Nehru Nagar, Chun- abhatti, MbPT nullah at Wadala, Laxmi Nagar nullah at Ghatkopar, Nahur nullah, Usha Nagar nullah at Bhandup, Mulund nullah, and Mithi river near Kalpana Talkies and Kranti Nagar, the officials said. Deputy municipal com- missioner (special) R Bhos- ale said individuals and of- fenders were fined between Rs 100 and Rs 5,000 by the spe- cial squad formed for the drive. Two special squads have been formed to keep an eye on spots notorious for clogged drains. The BMC spends over Rs 50 crore to clean, widen and desilt 2,000-km of drains to en- sure they are cleared before the monsoon. While it pun- ishes contractors and officials for slow progress of desilting work, never before has it de- cided to punish people throw- ing waste into the drains. R u p a l i M u k h e r j e e | TNN Mumbai: In one of the largest studies conducted so far, Glaxo’s anti-diabetes pill rosiglitazone (Avandia) re- ported an increasing evidence of heart risk, strokes and death, fuelling a debate on this hotly-contested drug, world- wide and in India, and raising questions on whether it should be banned by regulators. The issue assumes signifi- cance in India as rosiglitazone is a widely-prescribed diabetes drug, marketed by at least 10 companies, including Torrent, Dr Reddy’s, Cipla and Glaxo- SmithKline (GSK) India. Avandia has been under the scanner over the last three years, when one of the first stud- ies reported that it increased heart attack risk in diabetics, after which the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is- sued a safety alert. Subse- quently, the drug was marketed with a ‘black box warning’ . The latest study commis- sioned by the FDA, and pub- lished in the Journal of Amer- ican Medical Association (JAMA) observed 2,27,571 Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 years or older, who initiat- ed treatment with rosiglita- zone or a related drug, piogli- tazone, from July 2006 to June 2009, and who underwent fol- low-up for up to three years. A total of 8,667 heart at- tacks, strokes, heart failure and deaths were observed dur- ing the study period. Patients who were prescribed rosigli- tazone reported 6% more heart attacks as compared to those on pioglitazone; 27% more strokes; 25% more heart fail- ure and 14% more deaths. Dr David Graham of the FDA, the study’s lead author, said the results are alarming. Dr Anoop Misra of Fortis Hospitals, Delhi, said, “In view of repeated and decisive data, rosiglitazone has no place in the management of diabetes. In India, this drug should be banned due to less than ade- quate knowledge of adverse ef- fects by general practitioners in remote areas, and poorly in- formed patients.’’ A GSK India official declined to speak on the issue, while the drug controller general was not available for comment. The JAMA study was re- leased two weeks before a cru- cial US FDA advisory panel meets to decide on the medi- cine’s future. In India, the drug is more popular in towns, and widely prescribed in an estimated 20- 30% of diabetics. Popular diabetes drug raises risk of heart attack: Study WORK IN PROGRESS: Work in full swing to connect the Metro corridor to the central railway and the skywalk near Ghatkopar station THE BIG CONNECT ‘State law must change in keeping with RTE Act’ A n a h i t a M u k h e r j i | TNN Mumbai: Here’s a glaring in- consistency in the law. The Government of India’s Right of Children to Free and Com- pulsory Education Act (popu- larly known as the Right to Ed- ucation Act) bars schools from failing kids till Std VIII. How- ever, the state government’s Secondary School (SS) Code says that “a pupil who fails twice consecutively is liable to be asked to change schools’’. According to education- ists, the SS Code is regressive and should be amended so that Maharashtra’s laws are in tune with the central gov- ernment Act. State director of education, M R Kadam, said that the Right To Education Act, an Act of Parliament signed by the president, supersedes the existing laws. “This RTE Act has come into effect in 2010. The SS Code is an older law. Those parts of the code, which are not aligned to the Right to Edu- cation Act will not be appli- cable,’’ Kadam added. Arundhati Chavan, presi- dent of the PTA United Fo- rum, said that it was imper- ative that the government amend the code so that it is in sync with the Right to Ed- ucation Act. “The SS code allows a school to throw out students who have been failed for two years in a row. Many schools have used this clause to expel students. So it is important that the government change earlier laws. It is not enough that the government issues GRs announcing new laws,’’ she added. While the code is applica- ble to both aided as well as un- aided schools, Chavan points to the fact that private unaid- ed schools usually ignore the SS Code in relation to fee reg- ulation and teachers’ salaries. However, they follow it for ex- pelling kids who have failed two years in a row. Dr Harish Shetty, president of the Counsellor’s Associa- tion of India, who has been ac- tively involved with schools, says that the code is, by and large, overly authoritative and takes a ‘top-down’ approach towards education. “The SS code is not child- centric, violates the Right to Education Act and should be amended immediately,’’ adds Shetty. “The code is outdated and heavily favours schools over students. Failure, like fever, needs to be diagnosed early on by schools so that they can be put on the right course,’ he added. According to him, it is the responsibili- ty of the school to find out why a child fails. The issue assumes significance in India as rosiglitazone is a widely-prescribed diabetes drug, marketed by at least 10 companies Prashant Nakwe The Secondary School Code allows a school to throw out students who have failed for two years in a row. Many schools have used this to expel students. It is important that the government change earlier laws. A r u n d h a t i C h a v a n | PRESIDENT , PTA UNITED FORUM T he BMC has a monsoon target of removing 4,12,542 cubic metres of silt from 2,92,751 m of nullah length in the city. The BMC has been claiming that at last count it had finished most of the work and met the monsoon target Cleaning up clogged nullahs Panel Report Points To Massive Destruction At Gorai Creek CHOKED UP: Debris is being dumped on bunds, destroying mangroves at Gorai creek S i m i t B h a g a t | TNN Mumbai: For the first time in Maharashtra, wildlife re- searchers working with forest officials were able to track a leopard’s extraordinary 120- odd km journey from Malshej Ghat in the Pune District to the Sanjay Gandhi National Park (SGNP) in Borivli. The leopard, named Ajoba, took four months to cover the terrain, and did not shy away from crossing railway tracks, high- ways, and pockets of civilisa- tion, said researchers of Pro- ject Waghoba who are study- ing the man-animal conflict in the Pune and Nashik districts. The story began a year ago when Ajoba was rescued from a well in Alephata near the Pune-Nashik Highway by for- est officials. Researchers from Project Waghoba fitted it with a collar that had a tracking de- vice, and released the ani- mal near Malshej Ghat. Though the experi- ment took place in 2009, it was only this week that the researchers released their findings. “By following Ajo- ba’s movements, we discov- ered that leopards do not al- ways shy away from areas inhabited by humans,’’ said Vidya Athreya, wildlife bi- ologist and in-charge of the project Waghoba. “Though there is no continu- ous forest corridor between Malshej Ghat and SGNP, it cov- ered great distances.” Over a period of four months, Ajoba—be- lieved to be around four to five years old—crossed the railway station at Kasara and headed to Tansa and Tun- gareshwar sanctuaries. When it reached Nagla Block, the northern part of SGNP, Ajoba remained there for two months. One night, it even swam across the Vasai creek, and crossed the busy Ghodbunder Road to enter the main area of SGNP. “During its stay at Nagla Block, the leopard went to the residential Vasai industrial area, but did not attack hu- mans,’’ said Athreya. It was hunting stray dogs. This is the first time in Maharashtra that researchers were able to track the ani- mal’s movements. The track- ing device malfunctioned af- ter Ajoba crossed Vasai creek, and researchers have failed to make contact with it. “But the information we have sheds new light on leopard movement. It also helps us identify biological hotspots,” said researchers. ‘Translocating leopards not the best solution’ S i m i t B h a g a t | TNN Mumbai: Ajoba was not the only leopard to be tracked. Researchers and forest officials also fit- ted a tracking device on a female leopard, Sita, who had strayed into a village near her natural habitat at Surghana in the western part of Nashik. Sita was released at Jawahar, nearly 50 km away from her home. One of the goals of the project was to study the effect of translocation of leopards to unknown habitats, a practice that is commonly followed in India. Based on Sita’s movements—she was pregnant at the time—re- searchers believe that translocation may not be the best solution to the man-animal conflict. The findings of the year study have been well-received by many wildlife activists. Krishna Tiwari, the project officer of the City Forests Department (BNHS) said: “It is a good initia- tive that gives insights into leopards and their travel patterns. Such initiatives should be en- couraged and the forest department should launch a similar study for animals at the San- jay Gandhi National Park.’’ While weaning her cubs, Sita remained at Jawahar. “She was pregnant at the time, and her movements were therefore restricted. From the information we gathered from near- by villagers, we know that Sita remained in Jawahar for four months,’’ said wildlife biol- ogist Vidya Athreya who was in-charge of Pro- ject Waghoba. Interestingly, after four months, once Sita’s cubs were able to walk longer dis- tances, she returned to her home at Surghana, validating researchers’ views on the impor- tance of releasing rescued animals to their own and known territories. Around three to four years ago, leopard at- tacks on humans in and around Sanjay Gand- hi National Park, made headlines. What was not widely known, though, was that many of the leopards had been translocated to the na- tional park from other parts of Maharashtra. Tiwari said, “One of the prime reasons for these attacks was translocation of leopards. So such practices should be stopped.’’ Anand Pendharkar, wildlife biologist and di- rector of the NGO Sprouts, said: “It is essential that researchers carry out such studies on this endangered animal. It gives us an insight into what should and should not be done while re- leasing leopards into the wild.’’ The leopard called Ajoba who was rescued last year and fitted with a tracking device, travelled around 120 km in 20 days from the foot hills of Malshej Ghat to the Sanjay Gandhi National Park in Borivli Though Ajoba began his journey in May 2009, the ini- tial findings of the research team was released only ear- ly this week Ajoba crossed Malshej Ghat, Ajoba Peak, Ratangad, Kasara Railway Station, Tansa Wildlife Sanctuary, Wada, Tungareshwar Wildlife Sanctuary, Navghar, Vasai Industrial area and Nagla Block in Sanjay Gand- hi National Park When forest officials and researchers of Project Wagho- ba rescued the leopard they attached a collar with a track- ing device around its neck The collar had a Global Po- sitioning System (GPS) and Global System for Mobile Communication (GSM). The readings of the leopard’s posi- tion were stored in the collar and transmitted via SMS to the server whenever the ani- mal reached an area that had mobile connectivity The device costs around Rs 2 lakh and has been im- ported from Germany The tracking device, how- ever, malfunctioned after four months. Ajoba was last seen at the National Park in 2009 For First Time In Maha, Leopard’s 120-Km Trek To Mumbai Was Tracked SPOTTED: Ajoba’s trek from Malshej Ghat to national park National Park Navghar Tungareshwar Wildlife Sanctuary near Vajreshwari Wada Tansa Wildlife Sanctuary Kasara Railway Station Ratangad NASHIK Ajoba Peak Malshej Ghat Shirasd A LONG JOURNEY FOLLOWING THE SPOTS Mahesh Benkar LIVING FREE: Ajoba was rescued near the Pune-Nashik Highway, and fitted with a tracking device r Spy Pen Video Camera 16GB Pen Drive + Voice Recorder Autho j M roSD n aa ptO L 0m HOTDEALS/ ePhone TV Mobile - AP3 8 Stylish Dual SIM Multimedia Mobile Now See Cricket. 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Page 1: 4 WEDNESDAY,JUNE30,2010 TIMES CITY …

TIMES CITY * THE TIMES OF INDIA, MUMBAI WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 2010 4

‘Mangrovesnear Dahisarwill die soon’

Viju B | TNN

Mumbai: The latest report bythe committee appointed bythe Mumbai suburban collec-tor exposes the massive de-struction of mangroves atDahisar adjoining Gorai creek.

The report (a copy ofwhich is with TOI) notes thatthe land holder of surveynumber 344 carried out largescale destruction of man-groves and obstructed thenatural flow of salt water inthe mangrove area. Due tothis, the vegetation and man-groves here will die soon, thereport stated.

On Monday, Union minis-ter Jairam Ramesh had saidthat the ministry of envi-ronment and forests (MoEF)had written to the state chiefminister, Ashok Chavan, ask-ing the government to takeaction against violators.

The report was compiledby a six-member team com-prising senior forest andcivic officials who visited thearea following complaintsfrom residents. It was ob-served that debris was beingdumped all along the bundportion. “The bund was con-structed by digging out themud for the surroundingcreek filled with mangroves,’’the report said.

The report also observedthat that the land holder hadsubmitted the completion re-port, but the bund was beingfilled the help of donkeys. Asenior official said thatthough permission was giv-en only for repairing bunds,

the land holder had extend-ed the bunds and dumped de-bris over mangroves in grossviolation of the Bombay highcourt order.

“The Borivali-Dahisarstretch has seen one of thebiggest encroachments in re-cent times, with hundreds ofacres of mangroves destroyedon the banks of Vasai creek,’’said Harish Pandey, member,IC Colony New Link Road

Residents’ Forum.There are around 1,200

acres of mangroves adjoin-ing the Gorai creek, of whichhundreds of acres have dis-appeared due to encroach-ments. “Massive filling isseen along the boundary ofsurvey number 344. The ex-isting bund has beenwidened up to about 8-9 m.The mangroves along thebund were buried under thedebris,’’ the report said.

The report noted that cul-verts and gates have blockedthe entry of tidal water in theplot and there was no provi-sion given to these gates toregulate the entry of water.

BMC gets toughon litterbugsSharad Vyas | TNN

Mumbai: Over two weeksafter the BrihanmumbaiMunicipal Corporation(BMC) announced to crackthe whip and penalise citi-zens and commercial shopowners found clogging nul-lahs meant to carry rain-water into the sea, the civicclean-up drive has nowgathered momentum.

Taking the issue of keep-ing nullahs free of blockagesseriously, the BMC teamshave fined over 146 industri-al units as well as individu-als for throwing rubbish intothe nullahs in the last 12days. The collective fineamount stands at Rs 1.35lakh, said officials.

“Of these, at least 12were individuals who werecaught and fined for throw-ing waste into the drains inthe eastern suburbs; thedrives were carried out byour teams in the mornings,’’said a senior civic officialin-charge of the drive.

In his announcement onJune 12, municipal comms-sioner Swadheen Kshatriyahad said that the BMC hadhad enough. “No matter howmuch we clean the drains,people keep throwing wasteinto them every day,’’ Ksha-triya had said.

Most of the action tookplace in eastern suburbs; atKurla, Nehru Nagar, Chun-

abhatti, MbPT nullah atWadala, Laxmi Nagar nullahat Ghatkopar, Nahur nullah,Usha Nagar nullah atBhandup, Mulund nullah,and Mithi river near KalpanaTalkies and Kranti Nagar,the officials said.

Deputy municipal com-missioner (special) R Bhos-ale said individuals and of-fenders were fined between

Rs 100 and Rs 5,000 by the spe-cial squad formed for thedrive. Two special squadshave been formed to keep aneye on spots notorious forclogged drains.

The BMC spends over Rs 50 crore to clean, widen anddesilt 2,000-km of drains to en-sure they are cleared beforethe monsoon. While it pun-ishes contractors and officialsfor slow progress of desiltingwork, never before has it de-cided to punish people throw-ing waste into the drains.

Rupali Mukherjee | TNN

Mumbai: In one of the largeststudies conducted so far,Glaxo’s anti-diabetes pillrosiglitazone (Avandia) re-ported an increasing evidenceof heart risk, strokes anddeath, fuelling a debate on thishotly-contested drug, world-wide and in India, and raisingquestions on whether it shouldbe banned by regulators.

The issue assumes signifi-cance in India as rosiglitazoneis a widely-prescribed diabetesdrug, marketed by at least 10companies, including Torrent,Dr Reddy’s, Cipla and Glaxo-SmithKline (GSK) India.

Avandia has been under thescanner over the last threeyears, when one of the first stud-ies reported that it increasedheart attack risk in diabetics,after which the US Food andDrug Administration (FDA) is-sued a safety alert. Subse-quently, the drug was marketedwith a ‘black box warning’ .

The latest study commis-sioned by the FDA, and pub-lished in the Journal of Amer-ican Medical Association(JAMA) observed 2,27,571Medicare beneficiaries aged65 years or older, who initiat-ed treatment with rosiglita-zone or a related drug, piogli-

tazone, from July 2006 to June2009, and who underwent fol-low-up for up to three years.

A total of 8,667 heart at-tacks, strokes, heart failureand deaths were observed dur-ing the study period. Patientswho were prescribed rosigli-tazone reported 6% more heartattacks as compared to those

on pioglitazone; 27% morestrokes; 25% more heart fail-ure and 14% more deaths.

Dr David Graham of theFDA, the study’s lead author,said the results are alarming.

Dr Anoop Misra of FortisHospitals, Delhi, said, “In viewof repeated and decisive data,rosiglitazone has no place inthe management of diabetes.In India, this drug should bebanned due to less than ade-quate knowledge of adverse ef-fects by general practitionersin remote areas, and poorly in-formed patients.’’

A GSK India official declinedto speak on the issue, while thedrug controller general was notavailable for comment.

The JAMA study was re-leased two weeks before a cru-cial US FDA advisory panelmeets to decide on the medi-cine’s future.

In India, the drug is morepopular in towns, and widelyprescribed in an estimated 20-30% of diabetics.

Popular diabetes drug raisesrisk of heart attack: Study

WORK IN PROGRESS: Work in full swing to connect the Metro corridor to the central railway andthe skywalk near Ghatkopar station

THE BIG CONNECT‘State law must change inkeeping with RTE Act’

Anahita Mukherji | TNN

Mumbai: Here’s a glaring in-consistency in the law. TheGovernment of India’s Rightof Children to Free and Com-pulsory Education Act (popu-larly known as the Right to Ed-ucation Act) bars schools fromfailing kids till Std VIII. How-ever, the state government’sSecondary School (SS) Codesays that “a pupil who failstwice consecutively is liableto be asked to change schools’’.

According to education-ists, the SS Code is regressiveand should be amended sothat Maharashtra’s laws arein tune with the central gov-ernment Act.

State director of education,M R Kadam, said that theRight To Education Act, anAct of Parliament signed bythe president, supersedes theexisting laws.

“This RTE Act has comeinto effect in 2010. The SS Codeis an older law. Those parts ofthe code, which are notaligned to the Right to Edu-cation Act will not be appli-cable,’’ Kadam added.

Arundhati Chavan, presi-dent of the PTA United Fo-rum, said that it was imper-ative that the governmentamend the code so that it isin sync with the Right to Ed-ucation Act.

“The SS code allows aschool to throw out studentswho have been failed for twoyears in a row. Many schoolshave used this clause to expelstudents. So it is importantthat the government changeearlier laws. It is not enoughthat the government issues

GRs announcing new laws,’’she added.

While the code is applica-ble to both aided as well as un-aided schools, Chavan pointsto the fact that private unaid-ed schools usually ignore theSS Code in relation to fee reg-ulation and teachers’ salaries.However, they follow it for ex-pelling kids who have failedtwo years in a row.

Dr Harish Shetty, presidentof the Counsellor’s Associa-tion of India, who has been ac-tively involved with schools,says that the code is, by andlarge, overly authoritative andtakes a ‘top-down’ approachtowards education.

“The SS code is not child-centric, violates the Right toEducation Act and should beamended immediately,’’ addsShetty. “The code is outdatedand heavily favours schoolsover students. Failure, likefever, needs to be diagnosedearly on by schools so thatthey can be put on the rightcourse,’ he added. Accordingto him, it is the responsibili-ty of the school to find out whya child fails.

The issue assumessignificance in Indiaas rosiglitazone is awidely-prescribeddiabetes drug,marketed by at least10 companies

Prashant Nakwe

The SecondarySchool Code

allows a school tothrow out studentswho have failed for twoyears in a row. Manyschools have used thisto expel students. It isimportant that thegovernment changeearlier laws.Arundhati Chavan | PRESIDENT,PTA UNITED FORUM

The BMC has a monsoontarget of removing

4,12,542 cubic metres of siltfrom 2,92,751 m of nullahlength in the city. The BMChas been claiming that atlast count it had finishedmost of the work and metthe monsoon target

Cleaning upclogged nullahs

Panel Report Points To MassiveDestruction At Gorai Creek

CHOKED UP: Debris is beingdumped on bunds, destroyingmangroves at Gorai creek

Simit Bhagat | TNN

Mumbai: For the first time inMaharashtra, wildlife re-searchers working with forestofficials were able to track aleopard’s extraordinary 120-odd km journey from MalshejGhat in the Pune District to theSanjay Gandhi National Park(SGNP) in Borivli. The leopard,named Ajoba, took fourmonths to cover the terrain,and did not shy away fromcrossing railway tracks, high-ways, and pockets of civilisa-tion, said researchers of Pro-ject Waghoba who are study-ing the man-animal conflict inthe Pune and Nashik districts.

The story began a year agowhen Ajoba was rescued froma well in Alephata near thePune-Nashik Highway by for-est officials. Researchers fromProject Waghoba fitted it witha collar that had a tracking de-vice, and released the ani-

mal near Malshej Ghat.Though the experi-

ment took place in 2009, itwas only this week that theresearchers released theirfindings. “By following Ajo-ba’s movements, we discov-ered that leopards do not al-

ways shy away fromareas inhabited byhumans,’’ said VidyaAthreya, wildlife bi-ologist and in-chargeof the projectWaghoba. “Thoughthere is no continu-ous forest corridorbetween Malshej

Ghat and SGNP, it cov-ered great distances.”

Over a period offour months, Ajoba—be-

lieved to be around four

to five years old—crossed therailway station at Kasara andheaded to Tansa and Tun-gareshwar sanctuaries. Whenit reached Nagla Block, thenorthern part of SGNP, Ajobaremained there for two months.

One night, it even swamacross the Vasai creek, andcrossed the busy GhodbunderRoad to enter the main area ofSGNP. “During its stay at NaglaBlock, the leopard went to theresidential Vasai industrialarea, but did not attack hu-

mans,’’ said Athreya. It washunting stray dogs.

This is the first time inMaharashtra that researcherswere able to track the ani-mal’s movements. The track-ing device malfunctioned af-ter Ajoba crossed Vasai creek,and researchers have failedto make contact with it. “Butthe information we havesheds new light on leopardmovement. It also helps usidentify biological hotspots,”said researchers.

‘Translocating leopards not the best solution’Simit Bhagat | TNN

Mumbai: Ajoba was not the only leopard to betracked. Researchers and forest officials also fit-ted a tracking device on a female leopard, Sita,who had strayed into a village near her naturalhabitat at Surghana in the western part ofNashik. Sita was released at Jawahar, nearly 50km away from her home. One of the goals of theproject was to study the effect of translocationof leopards to unknown habitats, a practice thatis commonly followed in India. Based on Sita’smovements—she was pregnant at the time—re-searchers believe that translocation may not bethe best solution to the man-animal conflict.

The findings of the year study have been

well-received by many wildlife activists. KrishnaTiwari, the project officer of the City ForestsDepartment (BNHS) said: “It is a good initia-tive that gives insights into leopards and their

travel patterns. Such initiatives should be en-couraged and the forest department shouldlaunch a similar study for animals at the San-jay Gandhi National Park.’’

While weaning her cubs, Sita remained atJawahar. “She was pregnant at the time, andher movements were therefore restricted.From the information we gathered from near-by villagers, we know that Sita remained inJawahar for four months,’’ said wildlife biol-ogist Vidya Athreya who was in-charge of Pro-ject Waghoba. Interestingly, after four months,once Sita’s cubs were able to walk longer dis-tances, she returned to her home at Surghana,validating researchers’ views on the impor-tance of releasing rescued animals to their

own and known territories.Around three to four years ago, leopard at-

tacks on humans in and around Sanjay Gand-hi National Park, made headlines. What wasnot widely known, though, was that many ofthe leopards had been translocated to the na-tional park from other parts of Maharashtra.Tiwari said, “One of the prime reasons for theseattacks was translocation of leopards. So suchpractices should be stopped.’’

Anand Pendharkar, wildlife biologist and di-rector of the NGO Sprouts, said: “It is essentialthat researchers carry out such studies on thisendangered animal. It gives us an insight intowhat should and should not be done while re-leasing leopards into the wild.’’

� The leopard called Ajobawho was rescued last yearand fitted with a trackingdevice, travelled around 120km in 20 days from the foothills of Malshej Ghat to theSanjay Gandhi NationalPark in Borivli

� Though Ajoba began hisjourney in May 2009, the ini-tial findings of the researchteam was released only ear-ly this week

� Ajoba crossed MalshejGhat, Ajoba Peak, Ratangad,Kasara Railway Station,Tansa Wildlife Sanctuary,Wada, TungareshwarWildlife Sanctuary, Navghar,Vasai Industrial area andNagla Block in Sanjay Gand-hi National Park

� When forest officials andresearchers of Project Wagho-ba rescued the leopard theyattached a collar with a track-ing device around its neck

� The collar had a Global Po-sitioning System (GPS) andGlobal System for MobileCommunication (GSM). Thereadings of the leopard’s posi-tion were stored in the collarand transmitted via SMS tothe server whenever the ani-mal reached an area that hadmobile connectivity

� The device costs around Rs 2 lakh and has been im-ported from Germany

� The tracking device, how-ever, malfunctioned after fourmonths. Ajoba was last seenat the National Park in 2009

For First Time InMaha, Leopard’s120-Km Trek ToMumbai WasTracked

SPOTTED: Ajoba’s trek fromMalshej Ghat to national park

National Park

Navghar TungareshwarWildlife Sanctuary

near Vajreshwari

Wada

TansaWildlifeSanctuary

KasaraRailwayStation

Ratangad

NASHIK

Ajoba Peak

Malshej Ghat

Shirasd

A LONGJOURNEY

FOLLOWINGTHE SPOTS

Mahesh Benkar

LIVING FREE: Ajoba was rescued near the Pune-Nashik Highway, and fitted with a tracking device

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