Guindy National Park,
Chennai
Guindy National Park is a
2.70 km2 (1.04 sq mi) Protected area of Tamil Nadu, located in Chennai, South India, is the 8th Smallest National Park of India and
one of the very few national parks situated inside a city. The park is an extension of the grounds surrounding Raj Bhavan,
formerly known as the 'Guindy Lodge', the official residence of the Governor of Tamil Nadu, India. It extends deep inside the governor's estate, enclosing
beautiful forests, scrub lands, lakes and streams.
The park has a role in both ex-situ and in-situ conservation and is home to 400 blackbucks, 2,000 spotted deers, 24 jackals, a wide variety of snakes, geckos, tortoises and over 130 species
of birds, 14 species of mammals, over 60 species of butterflies and spiders each, a wealth of different invertebrates-grasshoppers, ants, termites, crabs, snails, slugs, scorpions, mites, earth worms, millipedes, and the like. These are free-ranging fauna and live with the
minimal of interference from human beings. The only major management activity
is protection as in any other in-situ conservation area. The park attracts more
than 700,000 visitors every year.
It has the rarest vegetation type – the tropical dry evergreen
vegetation. It is one of the smallest national parks and is situated right in
the heart of a metropolitan city - Chennai. But perhaps the best of all is that
it has a role in both ex-situ and in-situ conservation. The park boasts of over
350 species of plants, and forms a natural destination for botanists.
About 22 acres of GNP has been carved out into a zoo for ex-situ
conservation. This entails keeping different species in captivity on view to
public. Children’s park - the zoo was started with the idea of providing
children a natural environment, to educate them about animals and create
awareness on conservation. The animals have bred well in recent years. In
children’s park include black buck, sambar, spotted deer, porcupine, hyena,
jackal, python, grey pelican, night heron, cormorant, cockatiel, mongoose,
bonnet monkey, and common langur.
With the aim of spreading awareness, nature camps are conducted
for school students taking inside the national park and told of the importance
of the bio-diversity found there in. There is also a new interpretation center
giving information about the bio diversity found inside the park.
The Park is home to garden birds as the estuary at Adyar which has
mud and sand banks finds favour with a lot of the exotic variety.
History
Guindy Park, the earlier name of this National Park, was
originally a game reserve. In the early 1670s, a garden space was carved out of
the Guindy forest and a residence called the Guindy Lodge was built
by Governor William Langhorne (1672–1678), which had helped make St Thomas
Mount a salubrious place for rest and recreation. The remaining of the forest
area was owned by a British citizen named Gilbert Rodericks from whom it was
purchased by the government in 1821 for a sum of ₹ 35,000. The
original area of 505 ha was established as a Reserve Forest in 1910. Chital (spotted deer) were introduced into the park probably after
1945. Between 1961 and 1977, about 172 ha of the forest, primarily from
the Raj Bhavan, were transferred to various government departments in order to
build educational institutions and memorials.
In 1958, a portion of the forest area was transferred to the Union
Education Ministry for establishing the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras.
In the same year, another portion of the land was transferred to the Forest
Department for creating the Guindy Deer Park and Children's Park at the
instance of the then prime minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru. Memorials for
Rajaji and Kamaraj were built in 1974 and 1975, respectively, from parcels of
land acquired from the Raj Bhavan.
In 1977, the forest area was transferred to the Tamil Nadu Forest Department. In 1978, the whole of the remaining area, popularly known then
as the Guindy Deer Park, was declared a national park. It was walled off from
the adjacent Raj Bhavan and Indian Institute of Technology Madras Campus in the late 1980s.
Habitats
The Guindy National Park, Raj Bhavan and IIT-Madras habitat
complex has historically enjoyed a certain degree of protection and has
continued to support some of the last remnants of the natural habitats that
typify the natural range of plant and animal biodiversity of the Coromandel-Circar coastal plains in the northeastern Tamil
Nadu. The ecosystem consists of the rare tropical dry evergreen scrub and
thorn forests receiving about 1200 mm of rainfall annually.
This vegetation has been reclassified as the Albizia
amara Boiv Community. The region’s physiognomy occurs as discontinuous or
dense scrub-woodlands and thickets, containing species such as
introduced Acacia planifrons, Clausena dentata shrubs, palmyrah
palm (Borassus flabellifer), Randia
dumetorum, Randia malabarica, Carissa spinarum, Acacia chundra, exotic cactus Cereus Peruviana and Glycosmis
mauritiana.
The park has a tropical dissymmetric climate. The mean annual
temperatures are 32.9 °C (maximum) and 24.3 °C (minimum). Rainfall ranges from
522 to 2,135 mm, with an average annual rainfall of 1,215 mm. The
summer season in April and May determines the peculiar vegetation of the
Coromandel-Circar coast. Between June and December, wet season prevails, with
dry season occurring between January and March. The area also has a cleared
meadow called Polo Field measuring about 230 × 160 m. The park also
has a lake known as the 'Tangal Eri'.
The park is protected by a perimeter wall for a length of
9.5 km. There is an extensive network of roads and trails. The road
network covers about 14 km within the park. The park has two large tanks,
namely, Kathan Kollai (KK Tank) and Appalam Kolam (AK Tank), in addition to two
ponds, which usually dry up during summer. The presence of the park and
the surrounding green areas resulted in the byname, the green lungs of
Chennai, for the Adyar–Guindy area.
Flora
The park has the remnants of a game reserve established during the
days of British rule and there is a small portion of tropical dry evergreen
forest that made the Circar-Coromandel Coast. The present park is only a
skeleton of the dry evergreens and thorn shrubs that made it a great forest
once upon a time. There are scrub lands, forests, streams and lakes within the
Park and is enmeshed deep inside the Raj Bhavan compound. There are about 350
species of plants consisting of shrubs, climbers, herbs and grasses and 24
species of trees including Sugar Apple, Wood Apple and Neem. Approximately one
sixth of the land is grass land as this is preserved as the habitat for the Blackbucks.
The deer in the park lives off the shrubs and bushes. The trees are perfect
habitat for the birds. In the Children’s Park, there is a fossilized tree
specimen which is stated to be more than 20 million years old.
This flora provides an ideal habitat for over 150 species of
birds. About one-sixth of the park has been left as open grassland to preserve
that habitat for blackbucks. Though both the species of blackbuck and spotted
deer have their natural habitat in grassland, the spotted deer prefer bushes
and can adjust in land covered with shrubbery.
Fauna
The Park is a favourite place for water birds and the woodland
variety of birds like the Pacific Golden Plover, western reef heron, Swinhoe’s
snipe and sanderling which comes to roost in this park in winter. There are 130
species of garden variety birds that make themselves at home in this Park
and there are also birds with exotic names like the blue faced malkoha ,
Indian pitta, black baza, Malayan night heron, eye browed thrush, ashy minivet
and the long legged buzzard.
The Park has 24 Jackals, 400 Blackbucks, 2000 spotted deer, small
Indian civet, palm civet, bonnet macaque, hedgehog, common mongoose, the three
striped squirrel, bats, rodents and reptiles like snakes and many other insects
and animals kept in confinements. There are enclosures within the park where
King Cobras, pythons saw scaled vipers and other reptiles reside within
touching distance of the children’s park. There are other animals and
amphibians like the crocodiles, which have been put up in enclosures and are
protected. There are 60 species of butterflies and spiders. The place is also a
wonderland of invertebrates that consists of caterpillars, grasshoppers, ants,
termites, crabs, snails, slugs, scorpions, mites, earthworms and millipedes and
grasshoppers.
There are over 14 species of mammals including blackbuck, chital or spotted deer, jackal, small Indian civet,
common palm civet, bonnet macaque, hyena, pangolin, hedgehog, common mongoose and three-striped palm squirrel. The park also has black-naped hare and several species of bats and rodents.
The near threatened blackbuck, considered the flagship
species of the park, was introduced in 1924 by Lord Willington and has seen a population decline in recent times. While
blackbucks are a native faunal element of the park, chitals were introduced
into the park from the Government House on Mount Road when Raj Bhavan was developed, probably in the late 1940s,
although the exact date is not known. Some albino male blackbucks were also
introduced by the Maharaja of Bhavnagar. Per the census conducted on 29
February 2004, the population of Blackbuck was 405 (10 spotted in the IIT
campus). The chital population in the Park, however, appears to have been steady
or even increased since their introduction into the area many decades
ago. Per the census conducted on 29 February 2004, the population of the
spotted deer was 2,650. Of these, 1,743 were female and 336 were fawns. The
census was taken in the Guindy National Park and the adjoining areas of the
Indian Institute of Technology and the Raj Bhavan campus using King's transect method, which would only reveal the numbers close to the actual figure.
The park has over 150 species of birds including grey partridge, crow pheasant, parrot, quail, paradise fly-catcher, black-winged kite, honey buzzard, pariah kite, golden-backed Wood pecker, yellow-wattled lapwing, red-wattled lapwing, blue-faced
malkoha, shrikes, Asian koel, minivets, munias, parakeet, tailor bird, robin, drongo,
and stone curlew. Bird watchers anticipate
migratory birds here like teals, garganeys, pochards, medium egrets, large egrets, night herons, pond herons and open-billed storks every
fall season.
The park is home to about 9 species of amphibians. There are
also many kinds of reptiles, including saw-scaled viper and the fan-throated lizard. Some
species of tortoise and turtles—especially the endangered star tortoise, lizards, geckos, chameleons and the common Indian monitor lizard—are found here, as well as a large variety of insects including
60 species of spiders and 60 species of butterflies.
Guindy Snake Park and Children's Park
Chennai Snake Park Trust
The Chennai Snake Park Trust is a not-for-profit NGO
constituted in 1972 by herpetologist Romulus Whitaker and is India's first reptile park. Also known as
the Guindy Snake Park, it is located next to the Children's Park in
the Guindy National Park campus.
Located on the former home of the Madras Crocodile Bank Trust, the park is home to a wide range of snakes such as adders,
pythons, vipers, cobras and other reptiles. The park gained statutory
recognition as a medium zoo from the Central Zoo Authority in
1995.
History
The park, formerly known as the Madras Snake Park
Trust (MSPT), was established by the American-born naturalized Indian
herpetologist Romulus Whitaker, who, before coming to India in 1967, had worked with the Miami Serpentarium at Florida, United States. On his
arrival to India, he established a small snake park at Selaiyur village, a suburb of Chennai. In 1972, he obtained a piece
of land in Guindy on lease from the Forest Department of the Government of Tamil Nadu and,
with the help of a group of naturalists from Chennai, set up a bigger park and
soon constituted a trust to manage its affairs.
The Board of Trustees consisted of Doris N. Chattopadhyaya, Harry
Miller, M. V. Rajendran, S. Meenakshisundaram, M. Krishnan, Romulus Whitaker
and A. N. Jagannatha Rao. In 1976 and 1988, ex officio trustees from various
government institutions were added to the board. The park underwent
various renovations after 1994, including an aquarium for sea snakes and
turtles and restoration of enclosures and additional facilities.
In 1997, the park was renamed as the Chennai Snake Park, following
the renaming of the city of Madras in 1996.
Organizational structure
The chairman of the board of trustees is also the chief executive
of the park holding a part-time and honorary position. The director, assisted
by an environmental education officer, heads the full-time staff constituting
20 employees. There are eight animal keepers in the park, of whom five are from
the Irula tribe, traditionally known for their occupation of
snake-catching.
Objectives
The stated objectives of the park include the following:
· To maintain and display a
captive collection of snakes and other reptiles as a means of eliciting public
interest in them and prompting the public to empathize with them.
· To promote knowledge among
the public on reptiles and amphibians and dispel the widespread erroneous
beliefs about snakes in particular and, to this end, conduct awareness
programmes targeting school children primarily and bring out low-priced
publications with technical, semi-technical and popular contents on reptiles
and amphibians.
· To aid and assist research
on reptiles and amphibians including the conduct of surveys to assess their
status and distribution.
· To undertake captive
breeding of endangered species of snakes and other reptiles.
· To canvas public support
for the protection and conservation of reptiles and amphibians.
The park
The park covers an area of 1 acre in the Guindy National Park
campus. The land is taken on a long-term lease agreement with the Government of Tamil Nadu on
a nominal rental. Accessibility to the park is provided by a small road linked
to Sardar Vallabhai Patel Road. The park attracts about 700,000 visitors annually,
of whom one fifth are children, generating a revenue of about ₹ 6
million.
As of 2010, the park exhibits a total of 39 species, including 23
species of Indian snakes, all 3 Indian species and 4 exotic species of
crocodiles, 3 species of Indian tortoises and turtles and 6 species of the
larger Indian lizards.
Snake species on display include reticulated python, Indian rock python, common krait, Russell's viper, saw-scaled viper, Indian rat snake, red sand boa, common sand boa, dog-faced water snakes, common cat snake, common kukri snake, common bronze back tree snake, annulated sea snake, common wolf snake, common vine snake, striped keelback, checkered keelback, olive
keel back, common trinket snake,spectacled cobra, banded sea krait and hook - nosed sea snake.
Crocodilian species include the gharial, marsh crocodile, saltwater crocodile, Siamese crocodile, African dwarf crocodile, Nile crocodile and spectacled caiman.
Other reptiles at the park include water monitor, Bengal monitor, Indian black turtle, Indian flap shell turtle, Indian star tortoise, spotted rock gecko and South Asian chameleon.
The snakes are housed in glass-fronted enclosures and the
crocodilians and the larger lizards are housed in open-air enclosures protected
by parapet walls and wire mesh. The park also has an aquarium for water snakes
and turtles. All the enclosures have signages giving information in English and Tamil.
On 16 January 2010, the country's first-of-its-kind Digital
Infotainment–based visitor’s interpretation centre with static and
electronically aided moving mode displays with information on snakes in English
and Tamil, using six 32" LCD screens, was opened for public.
There is a small auditorium with a ceiling-mounted projector,
wall-mounted screen and a touch-screen kiosk for conducting classes for
visiting students. There are also facilities for projecting from the kiosk to
the wall-mounted screen. The park has a museum of preserved specimens of
reptiles and amphibians and a library with a stock of books and journals on
reptiles and related subjects.
The park also demonstrates venom extraction from snakes. From May
1976, the centre publishes a journal named Hamadryad on reptiles and
amphibians, renamed as Cobra since 1990. Originally a quarterly, the
journal was made a half-yearly since January 2010. The centre also publishes
various books on the subject.
The centre remains closed on Tuesdays.
Captive breeding
The park, along with the Arignar Anna Zoological Park, Madras Crocodile Bank and
the Mysore Zoo, is slated to become a
nodal point for captive breeding of endangered pythons in the country,
especially the Indian rock python (Python molurus) and reticulated python
(Python reticulatus). The park also breeds mugger crocodiles.
The park is one of the participating zoos approved by the Central
Zoo Authority for the conservation of rock python.
Research
In 2008-10, the park's research lab implemented a research for
developing a snake repellent to protect army personnel from snakes commonly
found in desert regions. This is being funded by a Defence Research and
Development Organisation (DRDO) grant of ₹ 900,000.
In September 2010, the Trust sanctioned a 5-year survey of
the herpetofauna of the
Southern Eastern Ghats in Tamil Nadu. The park also undertakes reptile surveys in various other parts
of the state.
Other activities
Initially, the process of extracting venom from snakes for
pharmaceutical companies to prepare anti-venom drugs was undertaken by the
park. However, after the government imposed a ban on selling snake skins, this
task has been given to the Irulas Co-operative Society at the Madras Crocodile
Bank Trust.
The park conducts various outreach programmes for schools in and
around Chennai on snakes and other reptiles and their environment and one-day
workshops for personnel of the forest department and fire and rescue services
department to train them in identifying snakes, rescuing them from human
habitations and translocating them to wild habitats.
The park also conducts regular demonstrations and lectures on
identification of some of the principal species of venomous and non-venomous
snakes, the need to protect them, ways of preventing them from getting into
human habitations and translocating them from such habitations, treatment of snakebite and so forth.
Incidents
On 11 July 2009, eight sand boas (Eryx johnii) in the park were stolen from their enclosures
located close to the quarantine block and the staff quarters. The theft
occurred in the night and was noticed the next morning. Incidentally, three
sand boas were stolen from their enclosure at the Arignar Anna Zoological Park
the previous night. However, two were recovered 3 days later, after they
were found hiding in the premises.
Children’s Park
For ex-situ conservation, about 22 acres (8.9 ha) of the
Guindy National Park has been carved out into a park known as
the Children's Park and play area at the northeast corner of the
national park with a collection of animals and birds. The Children's Park
gained statutory recognition as a medium zoo from the Central Zoo Authority in 1995.
Animals in the Children’s Park include black buck, sambar, spotted deer, porcupine, jackal, python, grey pelican, night
heron, cormorant, cockatiel, parrot, mongoose, common peafowl, crocodile, common otter, rhesus monkey, bonnet monkey and common langur.
The Children's Park also exhibits a fossilized tree specimen which
is estimated to be about 20 million years old and a statue of a Tyrannosaurus at the entrance.
The Children's Park and the Snake Park have separate entrances and
independent entry fees. Drinking water, vendors and catering are available. The
entrance lies on the busy Sardar Patel Road next
to the Adyar Cancer Institute.
Visitor information
There is a new interpretation center about the biodiversity of the
park. Entry into this protected reserve is restricted, and visitors can go into
the core area only when escorted by a forest ranger from the Forests
Department. The rear southeast edge of the park adjoins the campus
of Indian Institute of Technology. Along its northern fringes on the Sardar Patel road are the
Cancer Institute, CLRI campus, the Anna University, the Raj Bhavan and spaces
allotted for the Gandhi Mandapam, Kamaraj Memorial and Rajaji Memorial.
There are also memorials to India's great leaders, Mahatma Gandhi,
K. Kamaraj and C.Rajagopalachari, Bakthavatchalam in the vicinity.
The park organizes Lecture-demonstrations regularly in languages
like Tamil, Hindi and English. Though the park itself offers nothing much
for a real wildlife enthusiast, the Snake Park is interesting. The park sums up
a favourite picnic destination for the entire family especially school going
children.
Park Timings & Fees
The Park is open on all days from 9.00 am to 5.30 pm. It takes
three hours to see the park.
The visiting timings at the Snake Park is from 9.00 am to 5.30 pm
Children's Park is from 9.00 am to 6.00 pm and is open on all days except
Tuesday which is declared as a holiday.
Entry Fee:
·
Below 10 years - Free, 11
to above Rs.5/-, School Children (Age 5 to 12 years) from Government and aided
Schools - Rs.2.00,
·
School Children from
Private Schools (Age 5 to 12 years) - Rs.10.00.
·
Adult: 15.00.
Still Camera:
·
Rs.10, Handy Camera /
Video Camera - Rs.75,
·
Charges for documentary
educational films using Handy camera and Video Camera - Rs.2000
·
In Snake Park Still -Rs.
25/-, Movie - 150/-
Parking vehicle
charges:
·
Heavy vehicle: 50/-,
·
Motor car/van Rs. 15/-;
·
Motor Cycle : Rs. 5/-
Accommodation & Restaurants
There are small restaurants and vendors around the park. Chennai
is a metropolitan city and there are many hotels within the city that fits in
the pocket of any traveler. Visitors can log on to makemytrip.com, agoda.com or
any other popular sites to reserve their accommodation at reduced rates.
Contact
Wildlife Warden
(Adyar),
50, IV Main Road, Gandhi Nagar,
Adyar, Chennai – 600 020
Wildlife Warden
(Teynampet),
259 Anna Salai, DMS Compound, IV Floor,
Teynampet, Chennai 600 006
Ph. 044-24321471
Connectivity
The Park is within the city of Chennai and the nearest place is
Laxmi Nagar.
Chennai Egmore railway station is 9 km away. Chennai Central railway station is
12 km away. Chennai International Airport is 8 km away.
There are many buses that pass in front of the park and
transportation is never a problem in this area. There are separate passes for
the snake park and the children’s park.
The entrance to the Park is on Sardar Patel Road. The nearest
railway station is Kasturi Bhai Nagar MRTS, which is less than a kilometer from
the Park.
The Guindy Railway station where the suburban trains run is within
1 km.