Mohanraj N
Landscape Coordinator
Nilgiris - Eastern Ghats
Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu
Tel: +91 422 4202802
Mob: +91 94439 32028
E-mail: mraj@wwfindia.net
Dakshinamurthy V
Landscape Coordinator
Southern Western Ghats
Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu
Tel: +91 422 4202802
Mob: +91 98421 97483
E-mail: vdakshinamurthy@wwfindia.net
Ameen Ahmed
Senior Manager (Communications) -
Species and Landscapes Programme,
New Delhi
Mob: +91 96544 40590
E-mail: aahmed@wwfindia.net
Key Contacts
The Area
The Nilgiris Eastern Ghats landscape harbors the greatest number of Asian elephants in the world, with an estimated 6,300 to 10,000 living in the habitats that range from evergreen forest and dry deciduous forest to thorn scrub jungle and grasslands. Other large mammals such as Gaur, Sambar and Tiger also abound in the landscape.
The landscape covers an area of over 12,000 Sq. kms. The landscape comprises Elephant Reserve 7 of Project Elephant, a conservation project of Indian Government. The population of elephants extends along the western Ghats from the Brahmagiri hills in the west, south through.WWF-India AREAS Programme in its first phase is concentrating on securing the river Moyar Elephant Corridor. The corridor is located at the junction of Eastern Ghats and Western Ghats in the Southern part of the India. It maintains the contiguity between the Thallamalai Plateau in the east, the Mudumalai wildlife sanctuary in the west and Bandipur Tiger Reserve in the north.
The entire corridor is crucial for the genetic flow, dispersal of free ranging animals and has been extensively used by elephants to migrate to Eastern Ghats. The importance of securing this corridor for maintaining contiguity of habitat between different areas of the landscape is thus inevitable.