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This volume explores the spatial side of sustainability using cases
from India. It provides a variety of chapters from scholars from
West Bengal and elsewhere in the country, highlighting spatial
perspectives on environmental issues and offering insight on
sustainable development in the subcontinent from a geographical
perspective. A wide variety of topics are covered here, including
but not limited to mitigation of and adaptation to climate issues,
hydrogeomorphologic issues, environmental management, agricultural
sustainability, ecosystem services, urban environmental management
and tourism issues. The lessons learned here are transferable to
other contexts, and the book is a resource for researchers,
academics, practitioners, government organizations, NGOs and anyone
else interested in the spatial side of
sustainability. Â
Worldwide demand for sand and gravel is increasing daily, as the
need for these materials continues to rise, for example in the
construction sector, in land filling and for transportation sector
based infrastructural projects. This results in over-extraction of
sand from channel beds, and hampers the natural renewal of
sediment, geological setup and morphological processes of the
riverine system. In India, illegal sand mining (of alluvial
channels) and gravel mining (of perennial channels) are two
anthropogenic issues that negatively affect the sustainable
drainage system. Along the Kangsabati River in India, the
consequences of sand mining are very serious. The construction of
Mukutmonipur Dam (1958) on the river causes huge sediment
deposition along the middle and downstream areas, these same areas
are also intensely mined for sand (instream and on the flood
plain). Geospatial models are applied in order to better understand
the state and the resilience of stream hydraulics, morphological
and river ecosystem variables during pre-mining and post-mining
stages, using micro-level datasets of the Kangsabati River. The
book also includes practicable measures to minimize the
environmental consequences of instream mining in respect to optimum
sand mining. It discusses the threshold limits of each variable in
stream hydraulics, morphological and river ecological regime, and
also discusses the most affected variables. Consequently, all
outputs will be very useful for students, researchers,
academicians, decision makers and practitioners and will facilitate
applying these techniques to create models for other river basins.
Worldwide demand for sand and gravel is increasing daily, as the
need for these materials continues to rise, for example in the
construction sector, in land filling and for transportation sector
based infrastructural projects. This results in over-extraction of
sand from channel beds, and hampers the natural renewal of
sediment, geological setup and morphological processes of the
riverine system. In India, illegal sand mining (of alluvial
channels) and gravel mining (of perennial channels) are two
anthropogenic issues that negatively affect the sustainable
drainage system. Along the Kangsabati River in India, the
consequences of sand mining are very serious. The construction of
Mukutmonipur Dam (1958) on the river causes huge sediment
deposition along the middle and downstream areas, these same areas
are also intensely mined for sand (instream and on the flood
plain). Geospatial models are applied in order to better understand
the state and the resilience of stream hydraulics, morphological
and river ecosystem variables during pre-mining and post-mining
stages, using micro-level datasets of the Kangsabati River. The
book also includes practicable measures to minimize the
environmental consequences of instream mining in respect to optimum
sand mining. It discusses the threshold limits of each variable in
stream hydraulics, morphological and river ecological regime, and
also discusses the most affected variables. Consequently, all
outputs will be very useful for students, researchers,
academicians, decision makers and practitioners and will facilitate
applying these techniques to create models for other river basins.
This book sheds new light on the causes and consequences of
elephant migration in the Panchet Forest Division of Bankura
District in West Bengal, India- an area characterized by fragmented
forested landscape modified by agriculture and settlement
expansion. Anthropogenic activities result in the decline in
quality and coverage of forests, loss of biodiversity and removal
of forest corridors which ultimately restrict or modify the
movement of elephants causing a forceful change of their habitats.
A major objective of this monograph is to identify the
characteristics of man-elephant conflicts in terms of land use
change, cropping patterns, ecological characteristics of the
fragmented dry deciduous forest, trends and patterns of elephant
migration, and livelihood patterns of the inhabitants in the
affected areas. Readers will discover insights into changes in the
behavioral pattern of elephants and local people in the conflict
ridden zones, and how this influences food selection. Through this
book we also learn about rational management strategies that can be
employed on the local and national level to mitigate human-elephant
conflicts. Ecologists, landscape conservation planners and
environmental managers engaged in the conservation of large
vertebrates in fragmenting and human-dominated landscapes will find
this book valuable.
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