Tuesday, May 29, 2007

I 'm guided by these words - Blogger mangroveskerala - 51th Post


Each time a man stands up for an ideal,
or acts to improve the lot of others,
or strikes out against injustice,
he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope ,
and crossing each other from a million
different centers of energy and daring
those ripples build a current that can
sweep down the mightiest walls of
oppression and resistance.

- Robert Kennedy

Sunday, May 27, 2007

"Sometimes, I feel I’m another mad mangrove tree." - By Pokkudan



His real name is Pokkan, quite an earthly name for an untouchable pulaya (a downtrodden caste group of agricultural labourers and fisherfolk) born in the 1930s in Kerala. When he was born, his umbilical cord was like a blown-up balloon, or the bloated, elongated, seeds of the common mangrove tree. Out of affection, his kith and kin called him Pokkudan. He is now known as Kallen Pokkudan.
All his life, Pokkudan has lived close to the wetlands and, for over a decade, he has been collecting, preserving and planting the seeds of the ‘mad mangrove’ tree (long-fruited, stilted mangrove know as rhizophora mucronata). The association between the man and the tree is so close that Pokkudan says, "Sometimes, I feel I’m another mad mangrove tree." His name is now synonymous with mangrove conservation in Kerala.
When Pokkudan started planting mangrove seedlings in 1989, at the age of 52, he was all alone. Environmentalists had not begun to pay attention to the destruction of mangrove forests, the rainforests of the coastal ecosystem. The Coastal Regulation Zone Act had not come into force. Researchers had not begun to make a beeline to the pockets of wetlands in Kannur district in north Kerala, where Pokkudan lived. In just four decades, the extent of mangrove forests in the state had dropped from over 700 sq. km to a paltry 17 sq. km. Yet, Kannur still possessed nearly 45 per cent of the remaining wetlands in the state.

(Crusader who saves mangroves By Surendranath C.)

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

A Sea Turtle - Scene from Kolavipalam


Recently i visited kolavipalam near payyoli in kozhikode district , famous for sea turtle protection. Bhavya a B.Com final year student , voluteer of this movement narrated about the behaviour of sea turtles and its egg laying seasons. she also explained about their activities in order to protect the sea turtles and mangroves in the region.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

How does one calculate the worth of a 50 year-old tree's services, in Rupees?


if it is a mango tree, you might think of adding up all the mangoes, and timber you have got and working out their cost. But , it is not so simple.
Even a tree that has no fruits to yield could ask for a mind-boggling amount of over 60 lakhs for all the services it has rendered in fifty years. Let us take a look at the details.


The cost of 50,000 kilograms of oxygen @ Rs 20/- per Kg 10,00,000

Wages for controlling atmospheric pollution 10,00,000

Wages for holding water and converting it into vapour 8,00,000

Wages for preventing erosion and producing manure 5,00,000

Rent for providing shelter to birds and animals 3,00,000

Returns for the medicines given in raw form 25,00,000


Total 61,00,000

Friday, May 18, 2007

Munnar Eviction - A good lesson to encroachers.

The war against encroachments in Munnar, idukki district kerala continues.By demolishing a six-storeyed unauthorised resort on Nadayar Road and slapping summary eviction notice against five others on Sunday, the Special Task Force (STF) has sent a clear message to the encroachers in Munnar that they mean business.

Environment Day - News From Kerala

Students from Kerala would plant a record 20 lakh trees on environment day. The kerala state Govt notified 9,500 hectares of forested areas at mankulam as reserve forest.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Silent Valley - We want to protect it


Silent Valley is famous for its population of the rare Lion Tailed Macaque. Besides this it also hosts healthy numbers of Tigers, Leopards, Elephants, Gaur (Indian Bison), Leopard cats, Jungle cats, Fishing cats, Civets, Mongoose, Wild dogs, Sloth beer, Otter, Flying Squirrels, Malabar Giant Squirrels, Indian Pangolins, Porcupines, Wild boars, Sambar deer, Spotted deer, Barking deer and Mouse deer. Just like its vegetation, it also boasts of rare bird species such as the Ceylon Frogmouth, Black Crested Baza, Shaheen Falcon and the Nilgiri Laughing Thrush among 170 species found there. It is also home to over 100 species of butterflies and 400 species of moths.
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