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Thread: The voice of the voiceless wild:a tribute to m.krishnan

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    Default The voice of the voiceless wild:a tribute to m.krishnan

    LAST night I had a dream.I heard an eternal voice.I was listening to the deliberations in a meeting held to demarcate the boundary of a Tiger Reserve.
    *"Please tell me frankly whether you want the tigers to thrive in the proposed reserve or merely add one more name to glitter in the list?"-the naturalist-member asked.
    "We sincerely want the habitat to flourish with good tiger population."-the Chairperson replied.
    "Fine.Then where is the bottleneck in adding only 26.50 sq.km to the proposed boundary? It is the best sambar habitat."
    (The man has scanned the area for four days,stayed on the machan for three nights,drawn sketch, map, ready with estimates of prey and predator.)
    "We have already agreed, in principle, for an area of 450 sq.km.There are enough chitals, wild pigs and other prey species."
    "Sambar is a much bigger prey, liked by the tiger most.The lake has aquatic plant and grass, sambhars feed on the same.With increased level of protection, when the tiger density will grow, there will be lesser dispersal and man-animal conflict if sambar habitat is included."
    "Oh! I was not briefed about this."
    The meeting was adjourned for further deliberations on the subject in the next meeting.*

    Within the Indian Board of Wildlife or in the Steering Commitee on Project Tiger, M.Krishnan's voice was the voice of the forest. A very few people know that without his presence, many of the Tiger Reserves, National Parks and sanctuaries would never have come into existence or come up with such boundaries that wild life would have ceased to exist by now. His contribution for Bandipur, other places in South India and Ranthambhore was remarkable.

    He was our great teacher on nature. Nature came first for him before anything else including photography. He had amazing power of observation. I may touch upon some of the minute observations he made during his lifelong study of wilderness.
    A Langur when closely watched may draw foilage of the tree to hide his face. The Langur leaving the safety of tree and descending to the ground may be for its desire for concealment as an escape where it runs the risk of being overtaken by the predator.

    Chital hinds talk to one another in a low mewling voice when they do not see each other. When a pack of wild dogs, the most dreaded predator of our jungles, is on prowl upon Chital, no alarm call may be heard.
    When modern telemetry was not discovered, Krishnan made specific mention about presence of 'infrasound communication' between the elephants. A Tusker in musth often carries clay to cause free outflow of musth from temporal glands by goring, he also observed.

    While studying behaviour of Sambar, he recorded that it enjoys basking near slowly burning log without flame in preference to scorching sun.
    That Bommakka (the bold female buffalo having blind right eye) was attacked by the tiger leaping in from right side causing deep wound on lelt hip, did not escape his acute observation.
    When his jeep fell into a nullah,a tiger appeared and started encircling his jeep and after sometime all on a sudden it disappeared. Krishnan told his driver when it was all quiet that the rescue jeep is on the way and the tiger with its infinitely sharper hearing sense already heard it.

    Legendary naturalist, photographer, conservator and wild life expert, Madhaviah Krishnan was born on June 30,1912. He was awarded Jawaharlal Nehru Fellowship for ecological mammalian survey of penninsular India. He received PadmaShri award. About two thousand articles were written by him. His column "Country Notebook" in The Statesman, Kolkata which begun in 1950 (now being republished again) ran continuously for 45 years till Feb 18,1996, the day he died. The accurate text that accompanied pictures/sketches mesmerised young and old alike for decades. The most objective assessment was made by E.P.Gee when he said that 'AS A NATURALIST HE HAS NO EQUAL.' Except for a few initial years of working in princely state of Sandur, he happily remained a freelancer all throughout his life.

    SaktiWild

    *Imaginary

    #Indebtedness:The Statesman,Kolkata
    :BNHS
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    Last edited by Sabyasachi Patra; 12-08-2012 at 01:55 PM. Reason: Uploading photo of Shri. Krishnan

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