Eaglenest
Wildlife Sanctuary, Arunachal Pradesh, India:
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The interested reader can visit the Eaglenest Biodiversity Project
webpages, which are tailored to the serious birdwatcher and contain
information necessary for planning a visit to western Arunachal.
They also contain the western Arunachal bird list (450 and counting),
lists of butterflies and herpetofauna and are liberally sprinkled
with over 225 images of the faunal and the landscape. The 200
km transect (as the Ibisbill Ibidorhyncha struthersii flies)
from Kaziranga (in Assam) through Pakke and Eaglenest to Tawang
has 800 bird species on offer, and a well-prepared and well-equipped
team of knowledgeable birders can expect to see half those species
in 2-3 weeks of birding between December and April. Kaziranga
hosts a spectacular assemblage of migrants in winter, and winter
also offers a better chance for Black-necked Crane, Vivid Niltava Niltava
vivida, Black-headed Shrike Babbler, Rufous-bellied Bush
Robin, Grey-sided Thrush Turdus feae, and Red-faced Liocichla Liocichla
phoenicea in and around Eaglenest. On the other hand we have
recorded some of the region's specialities like the Purple Cochoa Cochoa
purpurea, Blue-fronted Robin Cinclidium frontale,
Lesser Shortwing Brachypteryx leucophrys and Emerald Cuckoo Chrysococcyx
maculatus only in May, but by then the plains (Kaziranga
and Pakke) would have been emptied of their winter hordes. December-January
and March-April are the best times for relatively short visits.
Those with more time to spare should plan on one visit spanning
December-March and another in late May (during the pre-monsoon).
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Maroon-backed
Accentor
(Tim Loseby) |
Some
of the other specialities of Eaglenest include Spotted Wren
Babbler Spelaeornis
formosus (it boasts six wren babblers in all), Brown-throated
Fulvetta Alcippe
ludlowi, Crimson-breasted Woodpecker Dendrocopus cathpharius,
all three tesias Tesia, Grey-headed Bullfinch Pyrrhula
erythaca,
Gold-naped Finch Pyrrhoplectus epauletta, Broad-billed Warbler Tickellia
hodgsoni, Black-faced Warbler Abroscopus schisticeps,
Slender-billed Scimitar Babbler Xiphirhynchus superciliaris,
Brown-throated Treecreeper Certhia discolor, Maroon-backed
Accentor Prunella
immaculata, Gould's Shortwing Brachypteryx (Heteroxenicus) stellata,
Rusty-bellied Shortwing B. hyperythra, Grey-sided Thrush,
Mountain Tailorbird Orthotomus cuculatus, Large Niltava Niltava
grandis,
and 12 laughingthrushes Garrulax. In reality, of course,
listing specialities in the Eastern Himalayas is quite wasted -
they are
all special, a fact brought home to me when Mike Waite highlighted
the
Crested Kingfisher Megaceryle lugubris in his trip report
(Waite 2004), a handsome species no doubt but... The pristine forest
at Eaglenest
is as amazing as the fauna it supports. My favourite patch is the
stretch above Eaglenest Pass. This broadleaved forest at 3,000
m is so dense
that the canopy looks like surface of a tea-garden! An unbroken
canopy stretches from Sessa Peak to the distant haze over the Brahmaputra
valley 3,400 m below; and in late December the different seasons
coalesce into a single mountain slope - from the veneer of winter
on the topmost
ridge, through the colours of fall and mist in the mid-elevation
temperate cloud-forest to the rich deep evergreen at the base!
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Red-billed
Leiothrix
(Tim Loseby) |
Fewer
than a dozen birders had visited Eaglenest from 1994 to 2003 despite
its ease
of access. However the activities of timber contractors had
caused an alarming reduction in tree cover in the buffer zones. But
for the ban on timber operations by the Supreme Court of India in 1997
there
would have been no buffer left and possibly no trees along the road
even inside the sanctuary. A more serious menace in the area is the
Indian army's desire to upgrade the jeep track into a four-lane
highway; without
informing the Forest Department, who seldom visit the area, army
engineers blasted large sections of the fragile mountain terrain
to widen and
straighten
the road alignment, leaving behind a 10 km strip of devastation in
the precious temperate zone. A major highway will be a permanent invitation
to poachers and encroachers to enter and diffuse through the protected
sanctuary. Once again the Supreme Court came to the rescue and has
stayed
all further activity until the final judgement, expected any time
now.
One of the principal aims of the Eaglenest Biodiversity Project is to
raise the national and international profile of Eaglenest and attract
visitors, both scientists and eco-tourists, to the area. In December
I had the gratification of observing a couple of would-be hunters turn
back on seeing us as 'they did not want to hunt in front of us who have
come from such a long distance to study the wildlife of their area'.
Perhaps that is the first essential step - conveying to the local populace
the worth of the globally treasured resource that they happen to be custodians
of. That, and a way for them to make a living from the forest without
destroying it.
The people living on the margins of protected areas, mostly from the
poorer sections of human society, rarely derive any benefit from the
wilderness they view as theirs, leading to a strong sense of local angst
and animosity against conservation measures. I have proposed that all
visitors to Eaglenest pay a per diem entry fee to a local community development
NGO which will decide how to spend the money after in-community consultations.
Ecotourism income will be able to fund activities critical for kick-starting
developments like improving local school facilities, village sanitation,
medical facilities, etc. This utilisation of income from a community
resource (i.e. the forest) for the good of the whole community should
nurture positive local interest in the continued survival of Eaglenest.
Furthermore it makes the community 50 Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary, Arunachal
Pradesh, India responsible for its own development instead of waiting
for alms from the government. The Bugun village committee has plans for
earmarking much of its income from ecotourism for subsidising the annual
costs of maintaining education facilities for their children - a wonderful
objective that we are trying to help from our side by raising funds for
improving the school/hostel facilities. I am also training some of the
Bugun people in the task of managing visitors by themselves. We hope
to encourage youngsters to take up birdwatching and possibly find their
vocation as bird guides, but that will take many years to come to fruition.
We are also examining the feasibility of a Bugun forest protection force
to patrol the area and enthuse the forest department staff into doing
their duty diligently.
For the ecologist May-October is the most interesting period in the
Eastern Himalayas: birds breed, orchids bloom, and cold-blooded animals
thrive. Unfortunately, torrential monsoon rains shut off most of Arunachal
Pradesh during this very period. However, the jeep track at Eaglenest
keeps it open even during the rains, at the least to those on foot, offering
unparalleled access to the scientist and the tourist. This ease of access
drew me to Eaglenest in 2003. I wanted to visit the area every couple
of months all through a year to understand how the wildlife assemblage
changes at different altitudes. Even after six visits the expectancy
of something new waiting round the corner has not abated. Over 11 weeks
of fieldwork last year we recorded close to 400 species of bird in Arunachal
alone (i.e. excluding Kaziranga) and almost a fifth of the species are
either on the IUCN Red List or involve range extensions, indicative of
how little the area has been studied. We had more than 20 sightings of
Ward's Trogon plus a nest site, previously unknown to science. We recorded
Wedge-billed Wren Babblers on five occasions, outnumbering by far the
number of published sightings of this species in the western half of
its range prior to the twenty-first century! The tourism effort affected
the detail in which I had intended to map the seasonal and altitudinal
distribution of birds at Eaglenest, but we did obtain a fair idea of
the broad pattern in summer and winter, enough to chalk out our future
strategy. One of the priorities is to estimate the populations of the
IUCN Red List birds, some of which are quite regular at Eaglenest and,
more importantly, we are in a position to predict where they may be found.
I suspect that a researcher equipped with a sound recording will find
that some rare species are actually not uncommon in that area. Last summer
I finally tracked down a oft-heard mystery song to a Blue-fronted Robin.
Many supposedly rare reptiles and butterflies are also proving to be
relatively common in the area.
A peculiarity I have noticed is that many birds, such as Striated Bulbul Pycnonotus
striatus, Ashy Bulbul Hemixos flavala, Golden-throated Barbet
and Blue-throated Barbet Megalaima asiatica, seem to occur at
higher elevations in winter than in summer! These are all common, easy
to identify, and highly visible species. Furthermore the summer/winter
differences are quite stark - Ashy Bulbul 1,000 m/ 2,500 m; Striated
Bulbul 2,000 m/2,700 m; Golden-throated Barbet 1,800 m/2,500 m; Blue-throated
Barbet 1,500 m/2,400 m. Many years ago Trevor Price found that leaf-warblers
forage about 1,500 m higher than their nesting sites in Manali. I wonder
if birds also make daily forays to higher elevation in winter in search
of temporally and spatially concentrated food resources (a fruiting
tree for instance)? But science requires more than fleeting impressions
and this very interesting possibility requires an ornithologist counting
birds in a rigorous manner.
Clearly there is much to be done in the years to come and we all have
a role to play - professional scientists, amateur naturalists, NGOs,
the local community, the forest department, and tourists - to learn from,
to enjoy and to protect one of the most remarkable pieces of real estate
in wild Asia.
Acknowledgements
The project was funded by the Rufford-Maurice- Laing Foundation (U.K.)
during November 2003- January 2005. My colleagues in the field included
Indi Glow, Pratap Singh, Ishan Agarwal, Viral Mistry, Shashank Dalvi
and Dhananjai Mohan. Project
webpage
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