Understudied and underprotected: biodiversity and conservation challenges in the Konkan region of Maharashtra

Avatar
Poster
Voice is AI-generated
Connected to paperThis paper is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review

Understudied and underprotected: biodiversity and conservation challenges in the Konkan region of Maharashtra

Authors

Chhaya, K.; Nulkar, G.; Bapat, P.; Barve, H.; Bhave, N.; Bokkasa, A.; Dandekar, V.; Desai, S.; Ghate, K.; Gindi, R.; Joglekar, A.; Joshi, A.; Joshi, P.; Kamat, S.; Karandikar, M.; Khod, C.; Kulkarni, M.; Lad, H.; Mandavkar, A.; Mestry, P.; Mishrikotkar, Y.; More, P.; Nerurkar, S.; Niphadkar, M.; Patwardhan, A.; Pawar, P.; Punjabi, G.; Purohit, P.; Rajwade, M.; Rane, M.; Raorane, V.; Surve, N.; Thakur, S.; Watve, A.; Naniwadekar, R.

Abstract

In biodiversity hotspots, such as the Western Ghats, periodic synthesis of existing ecological research can help identify knowledge gaps and address critical threats to biodiversity. The Maharashtra part of the Konkan region, situated between the Sahyadri foothills and the west coast, with diverse tropical vegetation, harbours unique open ecosystems, such as lateritic plateaus, and supports a multitude of threatened species, including hornbills and tigers. However, the region remains relatively under studied and has not received adequate protection through state or national conservation policies and laws. The area is undergoing rapid human-driven land-use change. These activities can impact the regions biodiversity, necessitating an effort to identify knowledge gaps and critical threats. Through a combination of a literature review and focus group discussions with 44 participants from various institutions and non-governmental organisations, we synthesised existing published information on the Konkan region of Maharashtra and identified key research gaps and conservation challenges. Our review of 138 studies found that while agroforestry and human-wildlife interactions have received some research attention, the effects of climate change on the regions biodiversity remain poorly understood. Focus group discussions highlighted major threats, including land-use changes due to expanding monoculture plantations, clear-felling of forests, forest fires, environmental pollution, and rapid infrastructure development, which are leading to habitat loss and fragmentation. Some of these concerns were validated by publicly available regional data, which revealed a 30% increase in roads, a 14% expansion of cashew plantations, and associated forest loss. This synthesis offers valuable insights for government and non-governmental organisations to inform future research and conservation efforts in the region.

Follow Us on

0 comments

Add comment