Bonal Bird Sanctuary

Bonal Bird Sanctuary
ಬೋನಾಳ ಪಕ್ಷಿ ಧಾಮ
Bohnal Bird Sanctuary
Village
Bonal Bird Sanctuary
Coordinates: 16°31′36.88″N 76°39′24.11″E / 16.5269111°N 76.6566972°E / 16.5269111; 76.6566972Coordinates: 16°31′36.88″N 76°39′24.11″E / 16.5269111°N 76.6566972°E / 16.5269111; 76.6566972
Country  India
State Karnataka
District Yadgir district
Government
  Body Gram panchayat
Languages
  Official Kannada
Time zone IST (UTC+5:30)
PIN 585290
ISO 3166 code IN-KA
Vehicle registration KA
Website karnataka.gov.in

Bonal Bird Sanctuary sometimes spelled as Bohnal Bird Sanctuary (Kannada: ಬೋನಾಳ ಪಕ್ಷಿ ಧಾಮ ) is bird sanctuary and wetland near Bonal village in the Shorapur taluk of Yadgir district in Karnataka state, India.[1] It is the second largest bird sanctuary in the state, after Ranganthittu Bird Sanctuary in Mysore, and around 21 species of birds have been recorded here, including purple heron, white-necked stork, white ibis, black ibis, brahminy duck, and bar-headed goose.[2]

History

The sanctuary has its origins in the Bonal tank, a water conservation tank built by the 17th century ruler of Shorapur, Pam Naik, later during the British Raj, Meadows Taylor, the British administrator at Shorapur, extended it to 1,600 acres with 12 feet average depth, as he mentions in his autobiography, The Story of My Life. It was one of largest amongst the twelve such water tanks built in the drought prone region, and gradually started attracting migratory birds. Most of these tanks were using were also used for fishing, and numerous families were dependent on it. In 1998, heeding to calls by conservationists, the state government transferred the area to the Forest Department from the Fisheries Department. Subsequently, fishing was banned the tank, but it took many more years before it was formally declared a bird sanctuary.[2][3] Finally in 2010, government declared its plans to invest Rs. 1 crore towards converting Bonal Tank to a bird sanctuary.[2][4]

Location

Bohnal Bird Sanctuary is 10 km west to the city of Shorapur.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.