Guwahati: The first photographic evidence of the 'Mainland Serow,' a vulnerable mammal species recognised by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), has been documented in Assam's Raimona National Park by forest officials and conservationists, an official said.
The photographic evidence of the 'Mainland Serow' was captured twice by forest department personnel and members of the biodiversity group 'Aaranyak' using digital camera traps near the Ganda Bajrum Anti-poaching camp, in the western range of Raimona National Park.
"The discovery of the Mainland Serow in Raimona National Park is good news for biodiversity conservation, and we are thrilled by the finding," said Bhanu Sinha, Divisional Forest Officer of the Kachugaon Forest Division.
The forest department's goal is to conserve this species and other wildlife extensively found in the national park, Sinha added.
The Mainland Serow population is widely distributed in the neighboring Phibsoo Wildlife Sanctuary and the Royal Manas National Park of Bhutan, which may contribute to the population recovery in Raimona National Park.
The finding has been published as a scientific paper in the Journal of Threatened Taxa.
"There is a wealth of wildlife in Raimona National Park, and the discovery of this species is good news for the conservation world," said M. Firoz Ahmed, a senior scientist at Aaranyak.
The Mainland Serow (Capricornis sumatraensis thar) is found across various habitats extending from the Himalayas on the Indian subcontinent to southern China, mainland Southeast Asia, and Sumatra, Ahmed said.
The species’ populations are fragmented, isolated, and rapidly declining due to poaching, habitat destruction, and habitat loss, according to senior conservationist Dipankar Lahkar.
The lack of reliable data on this species’ abundance and distribution makes it difficult to implement effective conservation actions to ensure long-term survival, Lahkar added.
Occasional poaching for bushmeat and habitat alteration due to logging during ethnopolitical violence are the primary conservation concerns of Raimona National Park.
"With the government now protecting the park, future conservation efforts should focus on securing and recovering the species’ population and restoring the degraded habitats," Lahkar added.
The Assam government declared Raimona a national park on June 8, 2021.