
Stealthily the destruction of the islands in the Sunderbans due to the rise in the sea level has created the first global-warming refugees. 7,000 inhabitants of the Lohachara Island, in the Ganga delta, have lost their homes and lands to the rising sea and have shifted to the Sagar Island to the north.
Sunderban, the largest delta of the world is slowly being wiped out as the sea level is rising. Two of Asia’s largest rivers, the Ganga and the Brahmaputra roll into the Bay of Bengal forming the world’s largest delta. The Mangrove forest in the region is home to a large number of plants and animals species who are now threatened with extinction following the destruction of the forest. One-third of the Sunderbans lies in India and two-thirds lie in Bangladesh. The rise in global temperature is steadily melting the Himalayan glaciers causing rise in the volume of the water in the rivers inundating the plains and finally flooding the Ganga delta, as the network of river channels empty their water in the sea.
With Lohachara Island being erased from the face of the earth, the angry tidal water is now engulfing Ghoramara Island, one mile to the east. A third of the Ghoramara land mass has already succumbed to the sea. The Sagar Island at present houses 20,000 refugees from the tide. As the sea level rises, the mangroves are overexposed to the salt water. This is adversely affecting the ecosystem of the Sunderbans. With rise in the salinity, the plants are losing their red and green colors becoming like bare twigs. This is destroying the wild life of the region especially the number of Royal Bengal Tigers is fast depleting. In the late 1960s, there were around 500 tigers but currently only 250 of the big cats remain, although the Indian Statistical Institute suggests that the number can be much lower. The tigers of the Sunderbans regularly swim between islands entering villages in search of food. This has escalated the woes of the islanders with over 50 people having been killed by tigers over the last five years.
If global warming continues unabated, this mighty mangrove forest with its huge treasure of wildlife will be lost forever from our planet.
Source: Guardian
Image:Journey Mart



Comments
Shocking! Sunderbans with all its bounty of nature has reached a point when it is on the verge of destruction and a matter of great global concern, but we Indians take notice only when it is too late!! Global warming is something that can’t be avoided, atleast the Government can take strong anti-poaching measures and try to save the flora and fauna of this region.
If this delta perishes and water engulfs it then one more habitat of big cats would be lost. Already these felines are on the verge of extinction and another calamity would make the matter worse.
It is an irony that although tigers are depicted to be animals with extreme strength, they cannot fight the cruelty of men. Not only Bengal Tigers are endangered, Sumatran Tigers here in South East Asia are now critically endangered due to the men’s activities
http://environe.blogspot.com
Sunderbans is the pride of Bengal and India. It is the land of great natual beauty and the Royal Bengal Tiger. Its high time Indians wake up to the problem of global warming and animal extinction and move theri government to do something about them