Abstract
The Ganges River dolphin (Platanista gangetica Roxburgh) of Subansiri River may be in great danger of extinction due to the construction of the 2,000-MW Lower Subansiri Hydroelectric Project, which started in 2006. A recent survey indicates that there are now 29 Ganges dolphins, up from 21 in 2006. It is feared that drastic changes would occur in the downstream hydrology and ecology of the Subansiri River after the installation of the project, scheduled for 2012. The water discharge during a major part of the day in dry months would come down to a meager 6 cumecs from the present average of 450 cumecs (1 cumec is shorthand for cubic meter per second; also cms, or m3/s (m3s–1). Riverine mega fauna like the dolphin would be worst hit by this extremely low discharge. Dumping of an extra amount of sediment from different construction phases has already increased sediment load in the Subansiri downstream and degraded some earlier pockets of dolphin up to 20 km below the dam site. There is reason to believe that high sediment influx might have silted up some of the deeper pools downstream, a preferred habitat of dolphins, forcing them to congregate close to the confluence of the Subansiri.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Ahmed B (2000) Water development and the status of the shushuk (P. gangetica) in southeast Bangladesh. In: Reeves RR, Smith BD, Kasuya T (eds) Biology and conservation of freshwater cetaceans in Asia. IUCN Species Survival Commission Occasional Paper No. 23
Baruah D, Hazarika LP, Dutta R (2009) Probable down-stream impact of 2000-MW lower Subansiri Dam in Arunachal Pradesh of NE India. Nat Environ Pollut Technol 8:835–844
Behera SK (2005) Conservation of Ganges River dolphin in upper Ganga River, project report, WWF India
Biswas SP, Boruah S (2000) Ecology of river dolphin (Platanista gangetica) in the Upper Brahmaputra. Hydrobiologia 430:97–111
Biswas SP, Baruah A, Mohan RSL (1997) Current status of river dolphin (P. gangetica) in the river Brahmaputra. Int J Ecol Environ Sci 23:357–361
Chen Pand Hua Y (1989) Distribution, population size and protection of Lipotes vexillifer. In: Perrin WF, Brownell RL Jr, Zhou Kaiya, Liu Jiankang (eds) Biology and conservation of the river dolphins. IUCN Species Survival Commission Occasional Papers, No. 3. IUCN, vol 173. Gland, Switzerland, pp 81–85
de Muizon C (1994) Are the squalodontids related to the platanistoids? Proc San Diego Soc Nat Hist 29:135–146
Fordyce RE, Barnes LG (1994) The evolutionary history of whales and dolphins. Annu Rev Earth Planet Sci 22:419–455
Gottfried MD, Bohaska DJ, Whitmore JRFC (1992) Miocene cetaceans of the Chesapeake group. Proc San Diego Soc Nat Hist 29:229–238
Hamilton H, Caballero S, Allen G (2001) Evolution of river dolphins. Proc R Soc Lond B 268:549–558
IUCN (1996) 1996 IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK, p 448
Kellogg AR (1959) Description of the skull of Pomatodelphis inaequalis. Bull Mus Comp Zool 121:1–26
Liu R, Wang D, Zhou K (2000) Effects of water development on river cetaceans in China. In: Reeves RR, Smith BD, Kasuya T (eds) Biology and conservation of freshwater cetaceans in Asia. IUCN Species Survival Commission Occasional Paper No. 23. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland
Mohan RSL, Dey SC, Bairagi SP (1998) On a residential population of the Ganges River dolphin P. gangetica in the Kulshi River (Assam) a tributary of Brahmaputra. J Bombay Nat Hist Soc 95(1):1–6
Morgan GS (1994) Miocene and Pliocene marine mammal faunas from the Bone Valley formation of central Florida. Proc San Diego Soc Nat Hist 29:239–268
Reeves RR, Brownell RL Jr (1989) Susu P. gangetica (Roxburgh, 1801) and P. minor Owen, 1853. In: Ridgway SH, Harrison R (eds) Handbook of marine mammals, vol 4. Academic Press, London, pp 69–99
Reeves RR, Leatherwood S (1994) Dolphins, porpoises and whales: 1994–1998 Action plan for the conservation of cetaceans. IUCN Species Survival Commission. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland, p 92
Reeves RR, Smith BD, Kasuya T (eds) (2000) Biology and conservation of freshwater cetaceans in Asia. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK, 152 pp
Reeves RR, Chaudhry AA, Khalid U (1991) Competing for water on the Indus plain is there a future for Pakistan’s river dolphins? Environ Conserv 18:341–350
Rice DW (1998) Marine mammals of the world: systematics and distribution society for marine mammalogy, Special publication no.4, Allen Press, Lawrence, Kansas
Roxburgh W (1801) An account of a new species of Delphinus, an inhabitat of the Ganges. Asiat Res Calcutta 7:170–174
Sinha RK (2000) Status of the Ganges River dolphin (P. gangetica) in the vicinity of Farakka Barrage India. In: Reeves RR, Smith BD, Kasuya T (eds) Biology and Conservation of Freshwater Cetaceans in Asia. IUCN Species Survival Commission Occasional paper No. 23. IUCN, Gland
Smith BD, Sinha RK, Zhou K, Chaudhry AA, Liu R, Wang Ding Ahmed B, Haque AKM, Aminul Mohan RS, Lal Sapkota K (2000) In: Reeves RR, Smith BD, Kasuya T (eds) Register of water development projects affecting river cetaceans in Asia Biology and Conservation of Freshwater Cetaceans in Asia. IUCN Species Survival Commission Occasional paper No. 23. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland
Smith BD, Reeves RR (2000a) Survey methods for population assessment of Asian river dolphins. In: Reeves RR, Smith BD, Kasuya T (eds) Biology and conservation of freshwater Cetaceans in Asia, occasional papers of the IUCN Species Survival Commission no. 23. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland. River Dolphins and the Larger Toothed Whales. Academic Press, London, pp 97–115
Smith BD, Reeves RR (2000b) Report of the workshop on the effects of water development on river cetaceans 26–28 February 1997, Rajendrapur, Bangladesh. In: Reeves RR, Smith BD, Kasuya T (eds) Biology and conservation of freshwater cetaceans in Asia. IUCN Species Survival Commission Occasional Paper No. 23. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland
Wakid A (2005) Conservation of Gangetic dolphin in Brahmaputra river system, India. Final technical report submitted to MoEF, Govt. of Assam, 80 pp
WWF (2006) Status, distribution and conservation threats of Ganges River dolphin in Karnali River, Nepal. WWF, Kathmandu, Nepal www.wwfnepl.org
Acknowledgments
Financial assistance provided by University Grant Commission, Government of India, in the form of Major Research Project (Project no: F No33-137/207(SR)-2008) to the first author is gratefully acknowledge.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Baruah, D., Hazarika, L.P., Bakalial, B. et al. A grave danger for the Ganges dolphin (Platanista gangetica Roxburgh) in the Subansiri River due to a large hydroelectric project. Environmentalist 32, 85–90 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10669-011-9375-0
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10669-011-9375-0