World Heritage Status for Western Ghats : Some Facts
UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee inscribed the Western Ghats of India as a world heritage site on July 1,2012. The tag came at the 36th session of the World Heritage Committee (WHC) in St Petersburg in Russia. Altogether 39 sites that dot the Western Ghats landscape will be part of the region that has been designated as World Heritage Site. Kerala leads with 20 sites being inscribed in the heritage list followed by Karnataka with ten, Tamil Nadu five and Maharashtra four. The Western Ghats – Some Facts
The Western Ghats, is a mountain range that runs along the western side of India.It runs, about 1600 kms, North to South, along the western edge of the Deccan Plateau.
-It is one of the eight hottest hotspots of biological diversity in the world.
-It originates near the border of Gujarat and Maharashtra, and runs through the states of Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala, finally ending at Kanyakumari.
-These hills cover a total area of 160,000 square kms. The average elevation is about 1,200 m (3,900 ft).
-The region is home to over 5000 species of flowering plants, 139 mammal species, 508 bird species and 179 amphibian species.
-It is also reported that the Western Ghats is home to at least 84 amphibian species, 16 bird species, seven mammals, and 1,600 flowering plants which are not found elsewhere in the world.
-There are numerous protected areas designated by the Government of India in the Western Ghats. They include two bio reserves and thirteen National Parks.
-The Nilagiri Biosphere Reserve that comprises 5500 square kms of evergreen and deciduous forests forms an important part of the Western Ghats.
-The Silent Valley National Park in Kerala, which forms part of the Western Ghats, is one among the last tracts of virgin tropical evergreen forest in India.
- In August, 2011, the Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (WGEEP) designated the entire Western Ghats as an Ecologically Sensitive Area (ESA). The panel also assigned three levels of ecological sensitivity to its different regions. Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (WGEEP): The Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel, was constituted by the Ministry of Environment & Forests in February 2010 under the chairmanship of noted environmental expert Prof. Madhav Gadgil. The panel has identified several eco-sensitive zones in the region and recommended that they should be declared no-go areas. Among its recommendations, the panel has also called for scrapping of Karnataka’s Gundia and Kerala’s Athirapally hydro-projects, and gradual phasing out of mining activities in ecologically highly-sensitive areas of Goa by 2016. It has also suggested setting up of a Western Ghats Ecology Authority (WGEA), as a statutory authority appointed by the Ministry of Environment and Forests, with the powers under Section 3 of the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986. The 24-member body is to have ecologists, scientists, representatives of civil society, as well as tribal groups, officials from the Union Environment Ministry, Planning Commission, National Biodiversity Authority, Central Pollution Control Board, and representatives of the state government as its members.
- List of Western Ghats World Heritage clusters in Maharashtra, Karnataka, Kerala and TN
MAHARASHTRA
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Kaas Plateau
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Koyna Wildlife Sanctuary
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Chandoli National Park
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Radhanagari Wildlife Sanctuary
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KARNATAKA
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Brahmagiri Wildlife Sanctuary
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Talacauvery Wildlife Sanctuary
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Padinalknad Reserved Forest
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Kerti Reserved Forest
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Aralam Wildlife Sanctuary
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Kudremukh National Park
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Someshwara Wildlife Sanctuary
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Agumbe Reserved Forest
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Balahalli Reserved Forest
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Someshwara Reserved Forest
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KERALA – TAMILNADU
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Kalakad- Tiger Reserve
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Shendurney Wildlife Sanctuary
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Neyyar Wildlife Sanctuary
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Peppara Wildlife Sanctuary
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Kulathupuzha Range
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Palode Range
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Periyar Tiger Reserve
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Ranni Forest Division
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Konni Forest Division
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Achankovil Forest Division
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Srivilliputtur Wildlife
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Tirunelveli North Forest Division
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Eravikulam National Park
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Grass Hills National Park
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Karian Shola National Park
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Parambikulam Wildlife Sanctuary
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Mankulam Range
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Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary
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Mannavan Shola
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Silent Valley National Park
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New Amarambalam Reserve Forest
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Mukurti National Park
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Kalikavu Range
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Attapadi Reserved Forest
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Pushpagiri Wildlife Sanctuary
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