Be informed, anytime, anywhere. IndiasNews.com
Search This Site
 
Global news. Local delivery. WorldOfNews.com
Add Headlines to your website(NEW)
 
India, Indian News, India Tourism
India, Indian News, India Tourism
 
 

Cricket Teams, Players, Scores
 
India, Indian News, India Tourism
Indian Hotels, Resorts, Vacation
 
India Tourism, Vacation, Places, Travel
India Tourism, Vacation, Places, Travel
 
India, India News, Indian Tourism
India, India News, Indian Tourism
 
Indian cinema. Bollywood news.
 
Business
 
Indian Hotels, Resorts, Vacation
Kerala Hotels, Resorts
Kovalam
Kovalam Hotels
Kumarakom
Kumarakom Hotels
Munnar
Munnar Hotels
Thekkady
Thekkady Hotels
Ernakulam, Kochi
Ernakulam Hotels
Vagamon
Vagamon Hotels
Bekal
Bekal Hotels
 
Explore Kerala
Explore India
Kerala Tourism
India Tourism
Indian States
 
 
 

  Today's Top StoriesIndian Time-39-s-green-hero-Dilawar-Mohammed-fights-for-the-sparrow News

 
Time's green hero Dilawar Mohammed fights for the sparrow

NAT32National/Environment/SocietyTime's green hero Dilawar Mohammed fights for the sparrowMumbai, Oct 7 IANS Dilawar Mohammed, one of the winners of Time magazine's Heroes of the Environment-2008, is a crusader for the almost ignored bird - the common sparrow.He is almost single-handedly struggling to raise awareness about conserving the common sparrow, which he feels is facing a severe threat from humans.Based in the heart of India's wine country, Nashik, north-west Maharashtra, Dilawar, 28, tends to over 150 sparrows daily, giving them food and water to enable them survive, since he says the bird's natural food resources are being eaten away by massive urbanization."The common sparrow is under attack from many quarters. Hundreds of trees and bushes are being cleared and replaced with monstrous buildings, open spaces are being concretized, hundreds of mobile phone communication towers are being erected in cities, towns and villages. All this has hugely affected the tiny sparrow," Dilawar explained.He considers mobile phone towers as one of the biggest threats not only to the sparrows, but to all other birds like the tailorbird, mynah, sunbird, as well as the squirrel - and human beings too. He quoted a recent survey by a New Delhi-based organisation, which found that electromagnetic radiation pollution in Mumbai due to mobile phone towers is 200 percent higher than the permissible limits."This means, we are sitting in an x-ray environment all the time. For the common sparrow, it causes irritation, it reduces their reproductive capacity. Even if it lays eggs, the hatchlings are either destroyed or born with serious deformities. Though the species is sturdy, sparrow chicks have a high mortality rate, as high as 50 percent, which affects its overall population," said Dilawar, a Masters in ecology and environmental studies, specializing in zoology from Manipal University.Dilawar compares the fate of the common sparrows to that of the "common man in a democracy - nobody bothers about him". Elaborating other examples of depleting space, he pointed out to the menace of corporates, housing complexes and even public authorities obsessed with landscaping using exotic and imported plants."They look very attractive but they repel insects and other natural food sources for the birds. In the long run, these landscapes will prove to be green deserts," he said.Sparrows, according to Dilawar are nature's bio-indicators. "They have lived with human beings for thousands of centuries, like squirrels, mynahs, tailorbirds and sunbirds - you don't find them in the jungles. If there is a significant shift in their population, its an alarm signal for us," Dilawar pointed out.Explaining the sparrow's characteristics, he said they survive in all temperatures from the humid coastal regions to the hot plains to the chills of Kashmir and beyond to Ladakh, up to 15,000 feet above sea level. In the open, a sparrow survives for around three years and up to 13 years in captivity.Referring to man's own contribution to the declining population, he said that in the cities, thousands of catapults are sold daily, which are used by children and youth to target birds. "As per the wildlife laws, selling catapults which can harm or kill creatures is an offence, but nobody has even thought of implementing and banning its sale. It's a lethal weapon which can shoot at a speed of 40 feet per second, fatal even for humans," he said.Even ordinary feeding of birds seen in cities is restricted to birds like pigeons and crows, mainly for religious purposes. "Nobody cares to throw seeds for the poor sparrows".He said that Time magazine's honour for him - first time it has gone to any ornithologist - will help highlight the cause of the common sparrow and all other common creatures facing threats of different kinds.Dilawar got married two years ago to Zainab, an interior designer who also manages to keep an eagle's eye on his uncommon obsession since four years - the common sparrow.--Indo-Asian News Serviceqn/rn/dg696 Words*07101543

 
 
 
 
 
 
News by topic
 
Indian Population News
Indian Poverty News
Indian Prisons News
Indian Protection News
Indian Race News
Indian Racism News
Indian Real Estate News
Indian Recalls News
Indian Rentals News
Indian Restaurants News
Indian Roads News
Indian Safety News
Indian Scams News
Indian Schools News
Indian Security News
Indian Seniors News
Indian Services News
Indian Soccer News
Indian Software News
Indian Sports News
Indian Stamps News
Indian Students News
Indian Symphony News
Indian Teens News
Indian Telecommunication News
Indian Telephone News
Indian Terrorism News
Indian Textile News
Indian Theater News
Indian Tools News
Indian Tours News
Indian Traffic News
Indian Training News
Indian Transport News
Indian Travel News
Indian Tuition News
Indian Universities News
Indian Vacations News
Indian Vets News
Indian Video Games News
Indian Violence News
Indian Volleyball News
Indian War News
Indian Water News
Indian Weather News
Indian Web sites News
Indian Weddings News
Indian Women News
Indian Wood News
Indian Youth News
 
 
 
Events & Announcements 
Add events related to India, Indians in India or abroad on our Indian Events Site www.IndianEvents.org. You can add any number of events by geography and category. The events will be displayed on more than 50,000 websites related to India maintained by Worldviewer.com, Inc. You can add photographs of the event. Also use our Indian Photo site www.IndiaInPhotos.com to upload photos related to India and Indian FREE. Please let your friends know about this site and our services. Thank you
Submit Events
 
Indian News - Powered by www.Indiasnews.com
 Napier, March 29 IANS Gautam Gambhir and Rahul Dravid saw through the first session to take India to 119 for one in their second innings at lunch on the fourth day of the second cricket Test against New Zealand here at McLean Park Sunday. - IANS.in 
 WASHINGTON - IANS.in 
 KATHMANDU - IANS.in 
 SRINAGAR - IANS.in 
 CHANDIGARH - IANS.in 
 Congress opens internet kiosks, launches e-campaign in Gujarat - aniin.com 
 India will retake second place with series win over England - aniin.com 
 Brangelina want to settle down in New Orleans - aniin.com 
 Lindsay Lohan 'nuzzles' Sean Penn at a private party - aniin.com 
 Kate Hudson keen to work with mum Goldie Hawn - aniin.com 
More >>


 
 INDIAN NEWSPAPER HEADLINES
 
Indian Photos

More Photos >>       Submit Your Photos
 


22
 
 
Globals (category) News
 About Us |  Advertise Here |  Contact Us
Disclaimer: Trademark Logos, Images, graphics and content on this page may be subject to copyright of their respective manufacturers or companies and you may need permission from the owner to use the image or other content for any purpose. All images are courtesy of and copyright their respective manufacturers or companies, unless otherwise indicated, without the express written permission of whom they may not be reproduced or retransmitted in any way. Images produced by the US government and other governments are generally in the public domain unless otherwise indicated.