Conservationists call for regulating temple tourism inside Mudumalai Tiger Reserve
The Hindu
The temple festivals, attracting thousands of devotees several times a year, lead to a proliferation of garbage inside protected wildlife zones; they also pose a risk to devotees themselves say conservationists in the Nilgiris; the Forest Department must regulate numbers and ensure litter is cleared promptly, they say
With a series of temple festivals set to commence in the buffer zone of the Mudumalai Tiger Reserve (MTR) starting from February, conservationists have appealed to the government to implement restrictions on pilgrims to minimise the impact of “unregulated temple tourism” on the wildlife and on local habitats.
The temple festivals, including the ones organized at Bokkapuram, Chokkanalli, Anaikkal and Siriyur, attract anywhere between 50,000 to 60,000 people into the tiger reserve each year. During these days, tonnes of garbage, including plastic and liquor bottles are carelessly discarded inside reserve forests, impacting wildlife within the reserve.
S. Bharathidasan, secretary of Arulagam, a conservation NGO working for the protection of vultures, said that a study conducted in the Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve (STR), which is a habitat contiguous with MTR, revealed serious impacts from temple tourism to local wildlife.
“Our study of the impact of pilgrimage tourism to the Bannari Amman Temple in Erode in STR showed severe impacts in the form of air pollution from the entry of thousands of vehicles during temple festivals, dumping of tonnes of garbage within the reserve, including medical waste such as sanitary napkins, diapers, needles and medicines as well as e-waste such as CDs, DVDs, mobile phone chargers, batteries and other items,” Mr. Bharathidasan said.
The NGO has also noted that in the last two decades, that nesting sites of critically endangered vulture species in Siriyur and the Anaikkal Mariamman Temple in MTR have been abandoned. An increase in the number of pilgrims, or changes in behaviour of the devotees could be factors behind the abandoning of the nesting sites,” he said.
“The remains of food waste, food containing excessive salt and the residues of flesh of sacrificial animals attract wildlife. As they consume the food remains along with polythene bags without being able to segregate them, it becomes detrimental to their health.
Not only that, wildlife gets attracted to these food items which is available quite easily to them around the temple premises when compared to regular food in the forest. Once wild animals gets habituated to food waste, there are chances of human-animal conflict as and when these requisite food items are unavailable to them,” said Mr. Bharathidasan.