A team of herpetologists from the Forest Department and two NGOs, Help Earth and Turtle Survival Alliance (TSA), found a pair of the rare species, Impressed Tortoise (ManouriaImpressa) in Arunachal Pradesh.
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This is the first-ever recorded sighting (not discovery) in India of this tortoise which is on a red list of threatened species, taking the count to five and the non-marine chelonian count to 29. Chelonian is an order of reptiles that includes turtles, terrapins, and tortoises.
The species has a golden-brown shell and skin.
There are only two species of tortoises under the Manouria genus. Northeast India was known to be the home of only the Asian Forest Tortoise (Manouriaemys) until the discovery of the Impressed Tortoise.
The male Impressed Tortoise is smaller than the female which is 30 cm in length, so it is medium-sized. This Manouria species is one-third the size of the Asian Forest Tortoise.
Turtle Survival Alliance, an organization working towards tortoise conservation, described it as a ‘critically endangered’ tortoise species which was elusive, vulnerable, and most importantly, never been sighted in India.
It inhabits hilly regions, moist primarily forest hill tracts of the Indo-Burma hot spot (Cambodia, China, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam). Its habitat is difficult to access and that makes its protection tough.
The last reported range extension of the species was from Gwa, Myanmar. The records of IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) show it to be fungivorous (fungi-eating). It is also considered difficult species for captive breeding. The clutch size (number of eggs laid at a time) is 10-21 eggs and not much is known of its nesting behavior.
The impressed tortoise measures one foot and has a ‘brilliant’ spine, which is bent upwards and beautifully serrated. It’s a magnificent-looking creature — impressive in color and shape. That is why it’s called the impressed tortoise in the first place.
Implications of the finding:
It hailed it as a landmark moment in turtle conservation. The implications of the finding are big since always in our country, in the conservation action plan, lesser animals are sidelined, always the focus is on elephants, tigers, or rhinos, and maybe this discovery will create an impact, very little maybe but a perception change might come and more researchers will join in turtle conservation.
With this discovery, India becomes the third most turtle-rich country in the world. There is 24 turtles (aquatic) species found in the country.
Sagar
Context:
A team of herpetologists from the Forest Department and two NGOs, Help Earth and Turtle Survival Alliance (TSA), found a pair of the rare species, Impressed Tortoise (ManouriaImpressa) in Arunachal Pradesh.
About:
More on news:
Implications of the finding: