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A practical working
model in conservation and the revitalisation of the
Tropical Dry Evergreen Forest flora and local health
traditions of coastal Tamil Nadu.

Why Conserve?
The Kaluveli Tank Bioregion
on the Coromandel Coast of South India covers a triangle between
Pondicherry, Marakannam and Tindivanam. The indigenous vegetation
of the area extending in a coastal belt from Ramanathapuram in
the south of Tamil Nadu to Visakhapatanam in Andra Pradesh, is
known as Tropical Dry Evergreen Forest (TDEF). This forest type
is found only in South India and Sri Lanka and provides a rare
biological richness due to its very high species abundance but
it is now close to extinction as only 0.01% survives. Only a few
isolated fragments of TDEF exist and many of the 200 odd species
of trees, shrubs and lianas listed by Meher-Homji (1989) are on
the verge of extinction. Surveys carried out by Auroville in the
last 8 years have managed to identify an additional 70 species,
seemingly indigenous, but often in small numbers. The bioregion
is home to at least 735 vegetative species including 400 plants
that have medicinal properties many of which have been used for
centuries by traditional practitioners. |