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A Lonely Battle for the Rainforests of Assam
 
A tiny environmental activist group is waging a lonely battle to save the last, surviving patches of a rainforest in the northeastern Indian state of Assam.
The few patches of the rainforest in the state's Tinsukia and Dibrugarh districts are the only ones left in this region of the Himalayan foothills. This rainforest area is spread over 500 square kilometers spanning the three contiguous reserved forests of Jaipur, Upper Dihing and Dirak. These forests are home to a large number of rare and endangered species.
 
Unbridled industrialization on the fringes of the three forests and pressure of a burgeoning population are fast taking their toll. If adequate steps are not taken immediately, the only rainforest of the region will soon vanish.
 
Crude oil was discovered in India in the Assam Oil Fields, and India's first refinery was built in 1883 at Margherita. It was shifted to its present site at Digboi in 1901. Until the mid-1950s, this was the only refinery in the country. Large-scale urbanization has taken place in the region and vast stretches of forestland have been converted to farmlands and used for agriculture or tea plantations. Millions of tones of timber, cane and other forest products are being extracted and the ground is being cleared for more tea plantations.
 
Econet, a non-governmental organization based in Pune in Maharashtra state has also helped by establishing communications links with national and international institutions involved in similar activities.
 
Biodiversity in the proposed Joidihing sanctuary has been vanishing rapidly. The Holoock gibbon the only species of ape found in India lives in these forests. Not more than 5,000 Holoock gibbons survive today. A 1972 Zoological Survey of India report put the population of Holoock gibbons between 78,000 and 80,000.
 
Among the rare and endangered species of animals found in the rainforests of Assam are clouded leopards, sloth bears, leopards, tigers, elephants, Indian bison, sambars, slow loris, capped langurs, hoolock gibbons and flying squirrels. Among the birds are drongoes, pheasants, oriales, jacanas, wood ducks, eagles, owls, hornbills and minivests. No other wildlife sanctuary or national park in the country gives shelter to such a diverse species of monkeys and apes. Because of this unique diversity, it is all the more necessary to give complete protection to this forest zone by upgrading it to the status of a wildlife sanctuary. Nature's Beckon has launched a movement in the state for conserving this rainforest by developing educational materials, posters and brochures to educate the people about the importance of the forest.
 
This rainforest is an important source of rare plants whose destruction may upset the ecological balance of the region. As there have been few studies on plants and animals living in these rainforests, further research could provide clues for manufacturing chemical substitutes for gasoline or medicines to cancer cure. Their destruction would result in the loss of rare species forever.
 

 
 
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