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Gharial population making a comeback

By Cindy Steinle · December 5, 2010 9:24 am

The most unusual of the Crocodilian group is gaining a foothold on their native lands. The wild Gharial is making a comeback in a big way. From the Times of India:
They have been spotted in numbers that are larger than had been expected when the reptiles were spotted after a gap of 60 years in downstream Hooghly two years ago. Now, a team of researchers has identified a breeding group at Purbasthali in Burdwan which signals that the gharials are finally multiplying. A young gharial, about three feet in length, was trapped in a fishing net at Purbasthali on Saturday. About a half-a-dozen more followed it into the net. They were all pulled up, examined and released back into the river. "By last count, the number of gharials had shot up to around 180. Now, it seems the number is actually more than 250 since they are breeding. We have spotted even smaller ones, new-born gharials merely six inches long. This is great news for conservation since the reptile was taken to be extinct in eastern India for six decades," said Tanmoy Ghosh, president of iRebel an NGO that has been researching on gharials with support from the West Bengal Bio-Diversity Board and the Hooghly Zilla Parishad.
Gharials are some of the most Amazing animals I have ever been near. The story photo is from St. Augustine Alligator Farm this year. To read the entire story, click here.

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