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Current tag: fusion zone of fresh- and saltwater network of tidal waterways
End of the River?
Written on:January 8, 2012
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By Amar Guriro Of the two largest Southasian deltas, one flourishes as the other faces the threat of being overrun by the sea. At a time when melting glaciers, shrinking coastal lands, depleting freshwater sources and vanishing forests are hot issues across the world, the tidal mangrove forests of the Sundarban constitute an encouraging example of effective conservation. Spread over 10,000 sq km in India and Bangladesh, with some…
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In category: Environment, Nature, The News on Sunday, Wildlife
Tags:1929 gazette of the Indian government , Amar Guriro email , animals , Baglihar hydropower project , Bangladesh , Brahmaputra river , British rule in south asia , creeks shrank Indus delta , cutting of trees , degradation of coastal land , depleting freshwater sources , downstream flows , End of the River , environmentalists , fauna and flora , fusion zone of fresh- and saltwater network of tidal waterways , Ganga , Ganges delta , general ecosystem , General Zia ul-Haq , hot issues across the world , how many kilometers of land are under seawater , hunting of wildlife in the Sundarban , hydropower projects on Jhelum and the Chenab rivers , illegal fishing , In Sindhi delta means Daryah jo Chhor , India and Bangladesh , Indian Botanical Society , Indus Delta , Indus system , irrigation canals , Karachi , Keti Bunder , Kishanganga Dam , Kotri Barrage , largest Southasian deltas , major barrages , Mangla Dam , Meghna and the Brahmaputra , melting glaciers , million acre-feet maf , mudflats , plants , Punjab government , Rann of Kutch , reasons for destruction of Indus delta , reduction in fishing opportunities , River Meghna , salt-tolerant mangroves , Sea Intrusion , shrinking coastal lands , Sindh , small islands in Bangladesh , Sundarban , Tarbela Dam , Thatta and Badin districts , the mighty Ganga , the world’s largest mangrove forests , tidal mangrove forests , total barrages and canals on river Indus , tributaries of the Indus , unavailability of potable water , vanishing forests , Warsak Dam , When Sundarban was declared World Heritage Site , when the construction of dams in Punjab province started
Tags:1929 gazette of the Indian government , Amar Guriro email , animals , Baglihar hydropower project , Bangladesh , Brahmaputra river , British rule in south asia , creeks shrank Indus delta , cutting of trees , degradation of coastal land , depleting freshwater sources , downstream flows , End of the River , environmentalists , fauna and flora , fusion zone of fresh- and saltwater network of tidal waterways , Ganga , Ganges delta , general ecosystem , General Zia ul-Haq , hot issues across the world , how many kilometers of land are under seawater , hunting of wildlife in the Sundarban , hydropower projects on Jhelum and the Chenab rivers , illegal fishing , In Sindhi delta means Daryah jo Chhor , India and Bangladesh , Indian Botanical Society , Indus Delta , Indus system , irrigation canals , Karachi , Keti Bunder , Kishanganga Dam , Kotri Barrage , largest Southasian deltas , major barrages , Mangla Dam , Meghna and the Brahmaputra , melting glaciers , million acre-feet maf , mudflats , plants , Punjab government , Rann of Kutch , reasons for destruction of Indus delta , reduction in fishing opportunities , River Meghna , salt-tolerant mangroves , Sea Intrusion , shrinking coastal lands , Sindh , small islands in Bangladesh , Sundarban , Tarbela Dam , Thatta and Badin districts , the mighty Ganga , the world’s largest mangrove forests , tidal mangrove forests , total barrages and canals on river Indus , tributaries of the Indus , unavailability of potable water , vanishing forests , Warsak Dam , When Sundarban was declared World Heritage Site , when the construction of dams in Punjab province started