A biodiversity hotspot
More like rolling hills than snow-covered mountains, the Western Ghats - stretching some 1,600km from the north of Mumbai to the southern tip of India - are a biodiversity hotspot that contains a large proportion of the country's plant and animal species; many of which are only found here and nowhere else in the world.
In the
northern part of the range, about one-third of the plants, almost half the reptiles, and more than three-fourths of the amphibians known in India are found in this narrow strip of rainforest just off the west coast.
The forests in the
southwestern Ghats are even richer, hosting the country’s largest population of
Asian elephants (
Elephas maximus) as well as
tigers (
Panthera tigris), lion-tailed macaques (
Macaca silenus), sloth bears (
Ursus ursinus), nilgiri tahrs (
Hemitragus hylocrius) and much more.
Mounting threats
The Western Ghats were once covered in dense forests. Today, a large part of the range has been logged or converted to agricultural land for tea, coffee, rubber and oil palm, or cleared for livestock grazing, reservoirs and roads.
The growth of populations around protected areas and other forests has also led to habitat destruction, increased fragmentation, wildlife poaching and
human-wildlife conflict.