Ramblings in the Darjeeling Terai: A Heronry in Naxalbari
The reason why everybody knows this
name is that this was the place that started the famous Naxalite movement which
was to be the Revolutionary Movement that would turn India red. Now it seems
risible, but for those who lived through those days, especially in West Bengal
still remember the panic created by the CPI (ML) cadres who fought the police,
killed indiscriminately in the name of eliminating class enemies and were
finally eliminated themselves in a paroxysm of state terror which remains a nightmarish
memory and finished off so many young, bright, if misguided young men and
women.
Be that as it may, today Naxalbari
shows little or no remnant of those days. It has blossomed into a bustling
little township, with a crowded bus stand and bazaar very close to each other.
There is a hospital, college and many schools and a railway station. There is
a profusion of shops, totos, buses, cars all jostling for space in its narrow
main street and in the afternoons, the streets are full of smart young students going home from school.
It is difficult to believe but in the midst of all this noise and bustle, there is mixed heronry. There are several trees in perhaps the most crowded portion of this community which are the only place in North Bengal where the Black-headed Ibis ( Threskiornis melanocephalus) nests. It is difficult to credit, but such is the case. It was almost a quarter of a century ago, in 1990, to be precise that several nature lovers from Siliguri, of whom Mr Animesh Bose was the most prominent, discovered this nesting site. Since then the birds have kept coming here without interruption and Mr Bose, together with several other bird lovers have kept watch over this unique spot.
I first visited this place in 2022
in the company of Antara Paul. Ms Paul is an active member of an NGO which has
been observing this site for many years and she has, in association with her
colleagues, Saumik Paul and Debyojyoti Dey published a paper about this colony
based on their careful observation over the past three years. She was kind
enough to take some time off to show my wife and I the colony from the roof of
a building that adjoins one of the trees that they occupy.
Since then, I have been to the site
several times, twice to participate in the bird counts that HNAF (Himalayan
Nature and Adventure Foundation), the Paschim Banga Bigyan Mancha and Airavat
conduct each year. The setting is surreal. As you walk along the main street
suddenly you are confronted with the calls of birds that are jostling for position atop just
a few trees that are just meters away from the busy market. Not just the Black Headed
Ibis, you have the Little Egret, the Intermediate Egret, the Black Crowned Night
Heron, the Little Cormorant and an occasional Open-billed stork and Red-naped
Ibis as well, though these last two do not nest here.
At the moment, there are basically two
locations in which they are nesting. One is a group of three trees, two of
which are banyan and one peepal. These three trees form an almost continuous canopy.
Close by there is a mango tree and two more, one banyan and one peepal.
A second location is not more than
a few hundred meters away. Here they occupy mainly three trees. One large tree
is a peepal tree which has been overrun by a climbing creeper which we could
not identify. This tree was also a favourite of the birds and large numbers
were nesting here. Two more banyan trees and one more peepal tree also had
several nesting birds.
Earlier, there was another location
a little further away. Unfortunately, the tree on which the birds used to nest fell
down during a storm and that site was lost.
The important thing is that the
nesting sites are protected by local populations who are kind enough to allow
bird watchers like us to the roofs of their buildings to get a better view of
the birds. Also, local science workers have carried out campaigns over the
years to sensitize the local population about the importance of preserving
these sites. I am glad to say that one of the most prominent is a newly minted physician, Ritwik Biswas from the North Bengal Medical College. The local population has supported these birds despite the fact that these birds can be a bit
of a nuisance with the noise and waste that they generate.
These birds will be here for a few
months more. In September or thereabouts they will leave and hopefully will be
back next year. This wonder of nature will continue to fascinate us for many
many more years.
Ref: Pal, S., A. Paul & D. Dey (2023). A study on Black-headed Ibis at
Naxalbari, foothills of Darjeeling, West Bengal. Bird-o-soar #200, In: Zoo’s
Print 38(6): 17–19.
All pictures courtesy Avijan Saha
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