India has had very little to celebrate on World Wetlands Day this year as it has lost its wetlands at an alarming rate of 38% in just a decade (1991-2001). Additionally, there continues to be a regulatory vacuum around wetlands, because of which they continue to be ungoverned and unprotected.
Nowhere is it more apparent than in the city of Bangalore, once famous for its beautiful lakes created by Kempe Gowdas and the Wodeyars of Mysore and then the British. The wetlands in the city are now dying a slow death thanks to rapid growth and urbanisation resulting in encroachment and discharge of sewage and industrial effluents.
Most lakes in the Bangalore region were constructed in the sixteenth century by damming the natural valley systems by constructing bunds. They met the drinking water, irrigation and fishing needs of the community and were known to have a positive impact on the ecology and microclimate of the city. They not only help by replenishing the groundwater resources in the vicinity, but also prevented flooding, treated wastewater, arrested sediment loads and functioned as a productive ecosystem.
A recent study on lakes titled 'Wetlands: Treasures of Bangalore (Abused, Polluted, Encroached and Vanishing)' conducted by a team of researchers headed by Professor Ramachandra T V from the Energy and Wetlands Research Group, Centre for Ecological Sciences, IISc, Bangalore surveyed 105 lakes in the city. It found that only four seemed to be in a good condition while 25 lakes were in a very bad state fully covered with macrophytes or dumped with solid or liquid wastes and with little or no water.
Professor Ramachandra argues, "It is so sad that there are so many resources put in to change the situation, but there is no initiative and interest from the bureaucracy to make a real difference. In this study, we found that four lakes were better off than many others. Why do you think this happened? This was only because they were restored and taken care of by local residents."
"We have been working on monitoring the state of the lakes since 1997 and the impacts of urbanisation of the lakes", says Professor Ramachandra. "We decided to undertake this detailed study following the increasing reports of fish deaths in the lakes and we were requested by people to monitor and explore the situation."
The physiochemical characteristics of 80 lakes of 3 different valleys namely Hebbal, Vrushabahavthi and Koramanagala-Challaghatta were monitored during all the seasons for a period of 24 months.
The study found that:
The report argues that the main reasons for this state of the wetlands are a lack of:
"If local people, non government organisations, bureaucrats, regulators, come together and decide to bring about a difference with utmost sincerity, the situation will definitely change. Right to live with clean water and environment is for everyone, not only the influential. If it will be possible to send this report to higher authorities and make them aware that they need to be more accountable, then I think the study has served its purpose", says Professor Ramachandra.
The report ends by making some recommendations for conservation and sustainable management of wetlands such as lakes in the cities:
Please download a copy of the report below.