financetom
Economy
financetom
/
Economy
/
A much-needed voice for the Nilgiris
News World Market Environment Technology Personal Finance Politics Retail Business Economy Cryptocurrency Forex Stocks Market Commodities
A much-needed voice for the Nilgiris
Jul 30, 2019 7:18 AM

Turn page 266, the last one of Voice of a Sentient Highland, and you would have transitioned through myriad emotions.

Share Market Live

NSE

Wonder, as author Godwin Vasanth Bosco’s knowledge of the land and its wildlife takes the reader on a journey through the biodiversity – predominantly plant life – of one of the most charismatic landscapes of the Western Ghats: the high-elevation shola-grasslands of the Nilgiris.

Then, predictably, follow trepidation, alarm and gloom: there’s always trouble in paradise. But astonishingly, there is hope too: there’s talk of survival and regeneration, alongside death. Though evoking these emotions in the reader like a popular science book would, Sentient Highland is, predominantly, a comprehensive treatise on the plant ecology of the Nilgiris, and a call to action for the immediate revival of this hill range that stands tall in the northern portion of the Ghats.

At first glance, the book may seem targeted at serious readers, with referenced studies and detailed analyses of research findings. But the author offers three ways of reading the book, ranging from ‘comprehensive’ to ‘fast’; the latter in the form of short, yellow-boxed summaries at the bottom right corners of alternate pages. These engaging boxes offer a quicker and easier read for the layperson.

The first two chapters introduce the reader to the Nilgiris: the landscape, unique biodiversity and people. Beautiful colour photographs (185 of them in total, including graphics) of flora, fauna and the landscape in panoramas punctuate the book at regular intervals, the images and detailed information transforming into an ode to the shola-grassland system. It’s also here that one of the most distinctive features of the book makes its first appearance: for while Bosco digs into historical and published literature for information, he adds to these his own insights from nearly nine years of research on sholas and grasslands in the Nilgiris.

A fair amount of focus falls on the native and altered plant ecologies of the Nilgiris, with the author documenting native vegetation in its last remaining pristine habitats as well as the origin, arrival and introduction of several exotics that have now taken over the landscape: from trees such as pine and wattle to weeds such as Kikuyu grass.

History is an integral component of Sentient Highland: Bosco digs into not just ecological history but geological history too (from the era of the formation of the Western Ghats nearly 60 million years ago), as well as religious, social, colonial and agricultural histories, showing how some of them resulted in ecological changes in the landscape (such as how grasslands came to be seen as ‘wastelands’ by administrators and planners).

However, people, or rather individuals, find scarce mention in the book; the sholas, grasslands, rivers and plants of the Nilgiris are the dominating characters here. But the cultural link between the indigenous peoples – the Nilgiris is home to around 25 different tribal communities – and the landscape is not forgotten.

Some of the stories surrounding these links are rather poignant. Take the cultural significance of the Pykara river, one of the many rivers that flows in this landscape, for instance:

“The Pykara River is known as Kawllykeen by the Todas, who consider it the most sacred river. It is said that the river god Awllvoy resides in the rocky steps that form a cascade in the river. As with several of the other rivers and streams, this river has a series of sacred crossing points which can only be crossed under certain conditions and as part of certain rituals. However, today this river has been dammed at several points and is also one of the most polluted rivers of the plateau.”

Throughout the book, the author sees regeneration, resilience and revival in the landscape as the land speaking, communicating, to people. Close to the end, this transforms into the notion that the mountains are alive and formed deliberately to provide for life.

“The highlands of the southern terranes of the Indian subcontinent are alive, and their evolution has happened with volition,” writes Bosco, justifying it with several ‘scientific’ reasons such as the geological formation and uplift of the Western Ghats.

“Standing first in line, facing north, and exposed to the world from where unprecedented changes could breakout from, the capacity of the Nilgiris to withstand pressures and show patterns has been built with volition. The earth’s processes must have been able to learn from past events and worked in anticipation and detection of conditions.”

The perspective, hinging on an almost creationist ideal, may be difficult for scientists or critical readers to accept. But this, as well as the editing that could have been improved, are something that could be gladly overlooked in favour of the invaluable insights on regeneration and plant ecology in the Nilgiris that Bosco provides based on his work.

His nuanced observations of plants and their establishment in areas that have not been studied in detail make the book a valuable one for students of shola and grassland ecology. lang=”EN-IN”>Sentient Highland, a Partridge India publication priced at Rs. 5,400 is a must-have in all school, college and research libraries, and your bookshelf at home too if you are a fan of mountain ecology.

Most importantly, the book is a must-read for managers working in such forest-grassland mosaics. For Bosco comments on less-discussed but crucial management issues – such as the use of fire as a management practice for grasslands, the usual knee-jerk reactions of large-scale tree planting to fight climate change, and shola deaths – in detail. How can sholas, shola-grassland edges, and grasslands be restored? Are invasive plants feeling the pinch of climate change too? Answers and solutions to these questions, as well as the importance of involving local communities in such work, find a place in Sentient Highland.

The book is a wake-up call to go carbon negative in the light of climate change, through ways such as reducing the industrial footprint and not mere ‘green-tech solutions’, which according to the author, do not work. Instead, allow nature to solve the problems we have created, he urges:

“It is an illusion that everything can be fixed because, without allowing nature to take over, there is a continuous escalation of the issues.”

With the book, Bosco has given a much-needed voice to the Nilgiris, showing readers the resilience and strength with which the natural ecosystem here is trying to persist, even thrive, in the face of extreme human-caused pressures.

Senna didymobotrya grown as ornamental plant at Coonoor, Nilgiris, Tamil Nadu, India. Photo by T. R. Shankar Raman/Wikimedia Commons.

(This story was first published on Mongabay)

Comments
Welcome to financetom comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Related Articles >
Federal workforce held steady in early months of Trump administration, data shows
Federal workforce held steady in early months of Trump administration, data shows
Jul 2, 2025
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump's administration on Tuesday reported having 2.3 million people on federal payrolls in March, almost unchanged from prior months despite the Republican's efforts to shrink the size of government. The Office of Personnel Management, which functions as the HR department for the federal government, published figures on Tuesday on hiring and firing across thousands of government...
Labor Market Flashes Red Signal—And The Last Time This Happened It Didn't End Well
Labor Market Flashes Red Signal—And The Last Time This Happened It Didn't End Well
Jul 2, 2025
The U.S. labor market is flashing a rare warning sign after private sector payrolls fell in June for the first time in over two years, raising concerns about the economy’s health and increasing bets on Federal Reserve interest rate cuts. Private employers cut 33,000 jobs last month, according to the ADP National Employment Report released Thursday. That's a sharp drop...
US Equity Indexes Trade Mixed, Dollar Languishes as Investors Assess Labor Market Data Before Senate Vote
US Equity Indexes Trade Mixed, Dollar Languishes as Investors Assess Labor Market Data Before Senate Vote
Jul 2, 2025
01:26 PM EDT, 07/02/2025 (MT Newswires) -- US equity indexes traded mixed, while the dollar hovered around its lowest in more than three years after midday Wednesday, as investors weighed the labor market data ahead of a final vote in the House of Representatives on President Donald Trump's Big Beautiful Bill. The Nasdaq rose 0.8% to 20,360.1 after hitting an...
Trump says US has struck trade deal with Vietnam
Trump says US has struck trade deal with Vietnam
Jul 2, 2025
WASHINGTON/HANOI (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that the United States has struck a trade deal with Vietnam, after months of negotiations, that imposes a 20% tariff rate on many imports from the Southeast Asian country. The rate is lower than an initial 46% levy Trump announced in April on goods from Vietnam, largely as a result of...
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.financetom.com All Rights Reserved