IN234
Chimmony Wildlife Sanctuary


Country/territory: India

IBA criteria met: A1, A2, A3 (2004)
For more information about IBA criteria, please click here

Area: 9,000 ha

Bombay Natural History Society
IBA conservation status
Year of assessment (most recent) State (condition) Pressure (threat) Response (action)
2003 not assessed low not assessed
For more information about IBA monitoring, please click here


Site description (2004 baseline)
The Chimmony Wildlife Sanctuary, situated east of the Parambikulam Wildlife Sanctuary, is of considerable ecological importance. It forms a continuous stretch of natural forests with Parambikulam Wildlife Sanctuary. It is one of the westernmost segments of the proposed Anamalai-Anamudi Conservation Unit, which starts from Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary in the east and stretches up to Peechi Wildlife Sanctuary as a continuous belt. The landform of the Sanctuary has an extremely varying topography. The territorial boundary of the Sanctuary roughly coincides with the watershed of the Chimmony river (Menon 1997). The innumerable channels of the river had carved the entire landscape into such a diverse topography that it is unique to this region. The climate is fairly equable in the Sanctuary. The dry season extends from December to April and the wet season from May to November. The hottest months are March, April and May. The bulk of the annual rainfall comes from the southwest monsoon. The tract receives an average rainfall of about 2,980 mm annually. Chimmony Wildlife Sanctuary consists of West Coast Tropical Wet Evergreen Forests, West Coast Semi-evergreen Forests, Moist Deciduous Forests and teak plantation nearly 35 years old (Champion and Seth 1968, Jayson 1999). The Evergreen forest is composed of Palaquium ellipticum, Calophyllum tomentosum, Cullenia exarillata, Dipterocarpus indicus, Artocarpus hirsuta, Bombax ceiba and Syzygium cumini. Lower canopy consists of species such as Cinnamomum zeylanicum, Mallotus phillipensis and Zanthoxylum flavescens. Calamus travancoricus, Ixora sp. and Laportea crenulata are seen in the undergrowth. According to Jayson (1999), most of the area of the Sanctuary consists of Moist Deciduous Forest, which merges with Semi-evergreen at higher elevations.

Key biodiversity

AVIFAUNA: A total of 160 species of birds has been recorded in a survey conducted by the Nature Education Society, Trichur, (NEST) in collaboration with the Kerala Forest Research Institute (Nameer 1992). Although no globally threatened species was recorded, five Restricted Range or endemic species were identified. The site lies in the Western Ghats Endemic Bird Area (Stattersfield et al. 1998), one of the biodiversity hotspots of the world. BirdLife International (undated) has identified 15 species which represents biome assemblages of the Western Ghats. This site comes under Biome-10 (Indian Peninsula Tropical Moist Forest). Based on the checklist prepared by NEST (Nameer 1992), nine of these biome species are found at this site. Once more detailed research is conducted, more species of this biome are likely to be found here.

OTHER KEY FAUNA: Out of the 47 large mammals reported from Kerala, 22 are found in Chimmony (Jayson 1997). Rare, endemic and endangered species include Nilgiri Langur Trachypithecus johni, Lion tailed Macaque Macaca silenus, Slender Loris Loris lydekkerianus, Leopard Cat Prionailurus bengalensis, Wild Dog Cuon alpinus, Indian Giant Squirrel Ratufa indica, Asian Elephant Elephas maximus, Gaur Bos gaurus, Mouse Deer Moschiola meminna and Tiger Panthera tigris.

Acknowledgements
Key contributors: P. O. Nameer and the IBA team.


Recommended citation
BirdLife International (2024) Important Bird Area factsheet: Chimmony Wildlife Sanctuary (India). Downloaded from https://datazone.birdlife.org/site/factsheet/chimmony-wildlife-sanctuary-iba-india on 22/11/2024.