By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Happen Recently
  • Home
  • Startup
  • Industry
    • Technology
    • Health
    • Sports
    • Education
  • Funding
  • Leadership
  • Podcast
  • Magazine
Reading: 22 green areas in India covered by invasive factory species, says new study  
Share
Aa
Aa
Happen Recently
  • Funding
  • Leadership
  • Startup
  • Industry
  • International
  • Magazine
  • Home
  • Startup
  • Industry
    • Technology
    • Health
    • Sports
    • Education
  • Funding
  • Leadership
  • Podcast
  • Magazine
Industry

22 green areas in India covered by invasive factory species, says new study  

Team Happen Recently
Last updated: 2023/10/06 at 3:49 PM
Team Happen Recently
Share
4 Min Read
SHARE

 High- concern factory  eruptions were recorded in 22 natural areas and modelled to potentially hang  66 natural areas  

 Biological  irruptions hang  biodiversity and  mortal well being, with developing tropical countries  similar as India being more vulnerable, said the study done by two Wildlife Institute of India( WII) scientists, Ninad Avinash Mungi and Omar Qureshi and the institute’s former doyen, Y V Jhala.   

The five- time long study published in the peer reviewed Journal of Applied Ecology on Thursday studied 1.58 lakh plots covering 358,550 sq km and  riveted on spotting 11 most  current invasive species in the India.  

The  slice covered 31 of  downs, 51 of dry  evanescent  timbers, 40 of  wettish  evanescent  timbers, 29 ofsemi-evergreen  timbers, 44 of evergreen  timbers and 33 of  wettish  champaign  downs.  

 “ High- concern factory  irruptions were recorded in 22 natural areas and modelled to potentially hang  66 natural areas. These estimates were statistically robust as suggested by  delicacy  pointers, ” the study said.   downs had loftiest  felicity for  irruptions( 87) followed by  wettish  champaigns and dry  evanescent  timbers(  72 each), while evergreen  timbers were  fairly least suitable( 42), the study said. Lantana camara was  set up to be most invasive of the 11 invasive factory species studied covering around 50 of the natural  niche  set up  raided. Mikania micrantha had  fairly least breadth and was  generally  set up in  wettish  champaigns and  timbers, the study said.   It also  set up that anthropogenic disturbance in form of beast grazing and climate change-  convinced agro-climate conditions eased spread of invasive species. Invasive species have the  eventuality to take over native species and impacts natural probe and  niche quality, the study said.   

“ These  current  mortal  variations likely explain the pervasive  irruptions across India. The influence of other environmental  motorists could be astronomically  insulated in dry and wet systems. propinquity to water was  set up to  grease invasive  shops of dry systems(  downs, dry  evanescent  timbers,etc.), whereas  propinquity to fire eased invasive  shops of wet systems(semi-evergreen and evergreen  timbers), ” the study said.   

Jhala said that it was for the first time that the magnitude of the problem through country-wide  checks has been  proved. “ The study identifies high invasive implicit zones and could help the government in putting  programs in place to deal with them as they’ve implicit to destroy the ecological systems, ” Jhala said.   

Source www.hindustantimes.com

The study  set up high  eventuality of invasive species in central India and Western Ghats, where  nearly half of the India’s 3,682 barracuda  live, as per the 2022 barracuda estimation. The  terrain ministry has  formerly  linked the problem of invasive species in barracuda  territories. The ministry has  enforced  public- scale invasive factory monitoring by integrating it with the marquee  design on barracuda assessment.  

 Using the  checks conducted for barracuda estimation in 2018, the WII scientists  set up that two- thirds of India’s natural areas are under multiple factory  irruptions, owing to the  heritage of anthropogenic  variations. The study said “ one- time  operation ” of invasive species in Indian  timber will need US$13.5 billion, which would be a  delicate task and  thus, recommended “ restoration precedence ” to be assigned to least  raided areas to maximise biodiversity returns. 

For further information visit at https://happenrecently.com/zepto/?amp=1

You Might Also Like

BEML Approves ₹1,500 Crore BRAHMA Rail Plant in Madhya Pradesh Boost for Make in India

Stock Market Today Feb 9 Sensex Nifty Outlook Positive on Dips Strategy

Historic Trade Breakthrough US Drops Additional Tariffs on Indian Exports

Vidarbha’s Future in Focus Advantage Vidarbha 2026 Industrial Expo Opens in Nagpur

Mohan Yadav Lauds Budget 2026 for Empowering MSMEs and Promoting Green Growth

TAGGED: happenrecently, India

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
[mc4wp_form]
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Team Happen Recently October 6, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link Print
Previous Article Over 100 people from Madhya Pradesh’s Morena  vill infected with dengue 
Next Article MOBIN KHAN PREPKEYZ’s FOUNDER MOBIN KHAN LAUNCHED LEARNING ANALYSIS SOLUTION THROUGH ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TECHNOLOGY FOR ALL EXAMS
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

HR

Happen Recently, the leading PR and news platform, has been making waves in the media industry under the dynamic leadership of its CEO, Shubham Pancheshwar. 

You can contact us at our email: connect@happenrecently.com

COMPANY

  • CONTACT US
  • TERMS & CONDITIONS
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • ABOUT US
  • DISCLAIMER

CATEGORIES

  • LEADERSHIP
  • STARTUP
  • INDUSTRY
  • PODCAST
  • MAGAZINE

LATEST MAGAZINE

Subscribe Now
Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram Linkedin

© 2025 Happen Recently. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version
adbanner
AdBlock Detected
Our site is an advertising supported site. Please whitelist to support our site.
Okay, I'll Whitelist
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?