The 'East Deccan dry evergreen forests' are an
ecoregion of southeastern
India. The ecoregion includes the coastal region behind the
Coromandel Coast on the
Bay of Bengal, between the
Eastern Ghats and the sea. It covers eastern
Tamil Nadu state and southeastern
Andhra Pradesh state.
Setting
The East Deccan dry evergreen forests cover lie in the rain shadow of the
Western Ghats and
Eastern Ghats, which block the rain-bearing summer
southwest monsoon. Rainfall averages 800 mm/year, and mostly falls during the highly variable
northeast monsoon between October and December.
The ecoregion covers an area of 25,500 square kilometers (9,800 square miles), extending from
Ramanathapuram District of Tamil Nadu to
Nellore District of Andhra Pradesh. Much of the ecoregion is densely settled, and has been substantially altered by human activity, including agriculture, grazing, and forestry, over the centuries. The ecoregion is home to the metropolis of
Chennai (Madras), and a number of other cities, including
Pondicherry,
Thanjavur,
Kanchipuram and
Nellore. It is estimated that 95% of the original forest cover has been cleared, and the species composition of the remaining forests have been altered by intensive human use.
Unlike most of the world's tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests, whose trees tend to lose their leaves during the dry season to conserve moisture, the East Deccan dry evergreen forests retain their leaves year round. Only two other ecoregions exhibit a similar pattern, the
Sri Lanka dry-zone dry evergreen forests and the
Southeastern Indochina dry evergreen forests.
The ecoregion is home to two important wetlands,
Kaliveli Lake north of Pondicherry in
Viluppuram District of Tamil Nadu, and
Pulicat Lake north of Chennai. Kaliveli lake is the one of the largest wetlands in peninsular India, and is deemed a wetland of national and international importance by the
IUCN. It is a seasonal wetland, with a gradient from freshwater to brackish water, and is an important feeding and breeding ground on migratory bird flyway. It is currently threatened by encroachment by agricultural fields, wildlife poaching, loss of the surrounding forests, and increases in commercial
prawn farming.
Flora
The original vegetation of the ecoregion consisted of forests with an understory of evergreen trees and an emergent canopy of taller
deciduous trees, including
Sal ''(
Shorea robusta)'', ''
Albizia amara'' and ''
Chloroxylon spp.'' Intensive human use of the forests over the centuries has mostly eliminated the deciduous canopy species, and the ecoregion's remaining forests are now characterized by areas of leathery-leaved evergreen forest, with a relatively low (10-meter) closed canopy. Predominant species are ''
Manilkara hexandra'', ''
Mimusops elengi'',
ebony ''(
Diospyros ebenum)'',
Strychnine tree ''(Strychnos nux-vomica)'', ''
Eugenia spp.'', ''
Drypetes sepiaria'', and ''
Flacourtia indica''. A few small enclaves of deciduous Sal forest exist, but are under intensive human pressure.
Only five percent of the ecoregion remains in forest, which is found in isolated pockets. Most of the ecoregion's forests have been degraded into tropical dry evergreen scrublands, characterized by thorny species such as ''
Ziziphus glabarrima'', ''
Dicrostachys cinerea'', ''
Randia dumetorum'', and ''
Carissa spinarum''.
Protected areas
Less than one percent of the ecoregion lies in reserves or protected areas. The Marakanam Reserve Forest, a sacred grove near
Marakanam, northwest of
Pondicherry in Tamil Nadu, preserves a section of evergreen closed canopy forest. Several other temple groves in the surrounding area, including Puthupet, Pillaichavadi, Mudaliarchavadi, and Kottakarai, preserve small enclaves of forest. The
Point Calimere Wildlife and Bird Sanctuary protects a 17.26 km². enclave of dry evergreen forest, as well as tidal wetlands and
mangroves. Other preserves in the region include
Vettangudi Bird Sanctuary (30 km²) in
Sivaganga District of Tamil Nadu, and
Nelapattu Bird Sanctuary (160 km²) on
Pulicat Lake in
Nellore District of
Andhra Pradesh.
References
★ Ramanujam, M.P. and Kadamban, D. Plant biodiversity of two tropical dry evergreen forests in the Pondicherry region of South India and the role of belief systems in their conservation. ''Biodiversity and Conservation'', 10 (7): 1203-1217, July 2001
★ Ramanujam M.P. and Praveen Kumar, Cyril K. Woody species diversity of four sacred groves in the Pondicherry region of South India. ''Biodiversity and Conservation'', February 2003, vol. 12 no. 2, pp. 289-299(11)
★ Blasco, F. and Legris, P. Dry Evergreen Forest of Calimere and Marakanam. ''Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society'', Vol. 70 (2), August 1973, p. 278.
External link
★
Terrestrial Ecoregions: East Deccan dry-deciduous forests (World Wildlife Fund)