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Nilgiris: Rewilding Success Returns Wildlife to Plantations
9 Jan
Summary
- Restoration transforms tea plantations into grasslands and shola forests.
- Efforts have successfully reintroduced tigers, leopards, and endemic birds.
- Indigenous knowledge guides ecological revival, fostering co-existence.

Ecological restoration efforts in Tamil Nadu's Nilgiri Plateau are successfully reviving native grasslands and shola forests, transforming former tea plantations into thriving wildlife habitats. Around eight acres of a tea estate have been restored to indigenous grassland and shola, attracting herbivores like deer and predators such as leopards and tigers. This initiative is crucial as less than 9% of the original grassland and shola mosaic remains due to extensive plantations and deforestation.
Conservationists, including organizations like Edhkwehlynawd Botanical Refuge (EBR) and Keystone Foundation, are spearheading these efforts. They are reintroducing over 10 grass species and 40 tree species, alongside native orchids and herbs. This meticulous work has led to the documented return of 12 endemic birds and mammals, including sambar, sloth bears, and the Bengal tiger. Traditional ecological knowledge from indigenous communities, like the Todas, is integral to this process, guiding the selection of native species and restoration techniques.




