JOURNAL OF THE BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY AUGUST 2009 VOL 106 (2)

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JOURNAL OF THE BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY AUGUST 2009 VOL 106 (2)

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EDITORIAL ON THE DIURNAL ADVERTISEMENT CALL FREQUENCY OF HEMIDACTYLUS FRENATUS WITH ADDITIONAL REMARKS ON THE DISTRESS CALL AND CHURR CALL Dieter Gramentz EARLY STAGES OF THE TRAVANCORE EVENING BROWN PARANTIRRHOEA MARSHALL I WOODMASON (SATYRINAE, NYMPHALIDAE, LEPIDOPTERA), AN ENDEMIC BUTTERFLY FROM THE SOUTHERN WESTERN GHATS, INDIA S. Kalesh and Satya Krishna Prakash A NEW REPORT OF CEPHRENES ACALLE HOPFFER (LEPIDOPTERA: HESPERIIDAE) FROM SOUTHERN WESTERN GHATS, WITH NOTES ON ITS NATURAL HISTORY AND IMMATURE STAGES S. Kalesh and Satya Krishna Prakash FAUNAL DIVERSITY OF CLADOCERA (CRUSTACEA: BRANCH IOPODA) OF LOKTAK LAKE (A RAMSAR SITE), MANIPUR (N.E. INDIA) B.K. Sharma and Sumita Sharma OPISTHOBRANCH FAUNA OF LAKSHADWEEP ISLANDS, INDIA, WITH 52 NEW RECORDS TO LAKSHADWEEP AND 40 NEW RECORDS TO INDIA: PART 1 Deepak Apte BREEDING ECOLOGY AND NESTSITE SELECTION OF YELLOWBROWED BULBUL IOLE INDICA IN WESTERN GHATS, INDIA P. Balakrishnan DIVERSITY OF SPIDERS IN GROUNDNUT CROP FIELDS IN VILLAGE AREA OF SAURASHTRA REGION Varsha Trivedi DISCOVERY OF A BREEDING GROUND OF THE GREATER ADJUTANT LEPTOPTILOS DUBIUS AND THEIR CONSERVATION IN THE FLOODPLAINS OF BIHAR, INDIA Arvind Mishra and Jai Nandan Manda

JOURNAL OF THE BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY AUGUST 2009 VOL 106 (2) JOURNAL OF THE BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY Hornbill House, Shaheed Bhagat Singh Marg, Mumbai 400 001 Executive Editor Asad R Rahmani, Ph D Bombay Natural History Society, Mumbai Copy and Production Editor Vibhuti Dedhia, M Sc Editorial Ajith Kumar, Ph Board Aasheesh D National Centre for Biological Sciences, GKVK Campus, Bird C.R Babu, Ph D Degraded Ecosystems, Com Andhra Pradesh, of Hyderabad Hebbal, Bengaluru G.S Rawat, Ph D Professor, Centre for Environmental of Pittie, B Watchers Society Management University of Delhi, New Wildlife Institute of India, K M.K Chandrashekaran, Ph Dehradun Delhi D., D Sc Rema Devi, Ph D Zoological Survey of India, Chennai Professor, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific J.S Singh, Ph D Research, Bengaluru Professor, Banaras Hindu University Anwaruddin Choudhury, Ph D., D Sc The Rhino Foundation for Nature, Guwahati Varanasi S Indraneil Das, D Institute of Biodiversity Subramanya, Ph D Phil University of Agricultural Sciences, and Environmental Conservation, GKVK, Hebbal, Bengaluru Universiti Malaysia, Sarawak, Malaysia R Y.V Jhala, Ph D Wildlife Institute of India, Sukumar, Ph D Professor, Centre for Ecological Sciences, Dehradun Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru K Ullas Karanth, Ph D Wildlife Romulus Whitaker, B Conservation Society - India Program, Madras Bengaluru, Karnataka Reptile Park Tamil T.C Narendran, Ph Sc and Crocodile Bank Trust, Nadu D., D Sc S.R Yadav, Ph D Professor, Department of Zoology, Shivaji University, University of Calicut, Kerala Kolhapur Senior Consultant Editor J.C Daniel, M Sc Consultant Editors Raghunandan Chundawat, Wildlife Ph D Conservation Society, Bengaluru Nigel Collar, Ph D UK BirdLife International, Rhys Green, Royal Society Ph D for Protection of Birds, Qamar Qureshi, M Wildlife Institute of India, T.J World UK Phil Dehradun Roberts, Ph D Wildlife Fund - Pakistan Rachel Reuben, Ph D Mumbai Editorial Assistant: Sonali V Layout and Typesetting: © Bombay All rights Natural History Society reserved No Vadhavkar, M Sc V Gopi Naidu 2009 part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, in writing from the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) Enquiries recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be addressed to the Honorary Secretary, BNHS at the address given above I VOLUME 106(2): AUGUST 2009 CONTENTS EDITORIAL 133 ON THE DIURNAL ADVERTISEMENT CALL FREQUENCY OF HEMIDACTYLUS FRENATUS WITH ADDITIONAL REMARKS ON THE DISTRESS CALL AND CHURR CALL Dieter 135 Gramentz EARLY STAGES OF THE TRAVANCORE EVENING BROWN PARANTIRRHOEA MARSHALL WOOD-MASON (SATYRINAE, NYMPHALIDAE, LEPIDOPTERA), AN ENDEMIC BUTTERFLY FROM THE SOUTHERN WESTERN GHATS, INDIA 142 Kalesh and Satya Krishna Prakash S A NEW REPORT OF CEPHRENES ACALLE HOPFFER (LEPIDOPTERA: HESPERIIDAE) FROM SOUTHERN WESTERN GHATS, WITH NOTES ON ITS NATURAL HISTORY AND IMMATURE STAGES 149 Kalesh and Satya Krishna Prakash S FAUNAL DIVERSITY OF CLADOCERA (CRUSTACEA: BRANCH IOPODA) OF LOKTAK LAKE MANIPUR (N.E INDIA) B.K (A RAMSAR SITE), Sharma and Sumita Sharma 156 OPISTHOBRANCH FAUNA OF LAKSHADWEEP ISLANDS, AND 40 NEW RECORDS TO INDIA: PART INDIA, WITH 52 NEW RECORDS TO LAKSHADWEEP 162 Deepak Apte BREEDING ECOLOGY AND NEST-SITE SELECTION OF YELLOW-BROWED BULBUL IOLE INDICA IN WESTERN GHATS, INDIA P 176 Balakrishnan DIVERSITY OF SPIDERS IN GROUNDNUT CROP FIELDS IN VILLAGE AREA OF SAURASHTRA REGION 184 Varsha Trivedi DISCOVERY OF A BREEDING GROUND OF THE GREATER ADJUTANT LEPTOPTILOS DUBIUS AND THEIR CONSERVATION IN THE FLOODPLAINS OF BIHAR, INDIA Arvind Mishra and Jai Nandan Mandal 190 NEW DESCRIPTION A NEW SPECIES OF BRACHYMERIA WESTWOOD (HYMENOPTERA: CHALCIDIDAE) ON RICE SKIPPER, PARNARA GUTTATA (LEPIDOPTERA: HESPERIIDAE) FROM SOUTH KASHMIR Md Jamal Ahmad 198 REVIEW CONSERVING BIODIVERSITY OF RAJASTHAN (WITH EMPHASIS ON WILD FAUNA AND FLORA) Reviewed by Asad R Rahmani 201 MISCELLANEOUS NOTES MAMMALS Interaction of the Pig-tailed Macaque Macaca nemestrina leonina with other primates in in some forests of Heteroglaux Assam Additional notes Rushikesh on the diet of Sloth 202 Mudumalai Tiger Reserve as shown by scat analysis T Ramesh, K Sankar and Qamar Qureshi in Black-headed 204 Senma and R 206 Ram in Kachchh, 208 New record of Brachysaura n?/nor(Hardwicke and Gray), India 209 Observations on unusual foraging behaviour Acanthodactytus cantoris Gunther, 1864, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India Sreekar and Rudra 207 D Rithe Rina Chakraborty and Gouri Das Gupta Sighting of Grey-headed Lapwing Vanettus cinereus (Blyth) in Chavan and Kishor an Agamid Lizard from Orissa, Ibis Chirag A Acharya A Ultramarine Flycatcher Ficedula superciliaris REPTILES Threskiornis melanocephalus during breeding season Rajesh C Owlet Gujarat Mysterious characters recorded of the Forest from Yawal Wildlife Sanctuary, J.K Tiwari BIRDS Bear Melursus ursinus in blewitti Maharashtra, India North-east India Anwaruddin Choudhury Occurrence and breeding record in of Western Kachchh, Gujarat, India 207 Manojkumar Pardeshi, V Vijay Kumar and Sanjay K Das 209 First OTHER INVERTEBRATES record of Protobothrops jerdonii xanthomelas (Gunther, 1889) from Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary, India Amod Zambre, 13 Chintan Sheth, Shashank Dalvi and Nirmal Kulkarni 211 preliminary note on the Marine in and around Bahuda Estuary, Orissa, East Coast S.K Pati, D AMPHIBIANS 10 A of Frogs at Son Chiriya Wildlife 14 Crotalaria angulata Miller Tieghem - new records Karthikeyan Vasudevan and G Prudhvi Raj 213 222 and Taxillus bracteatus (Wall.) to the Flora of Orissa C Sudhakar Reddy, Chiranjibi Pattanaik and A.K Biswal FISH On a record of Badis badis (Hamilton) (Teleostei: J.D Marcus Knight and K Rema 224 Hedychium flavescens Carey ex Roscoe - an to the Flora of Perciformes: Badidae) from Tamil Nadu, India 215 Devi 16 INSECTS 12 of India Mahapatro and R.C Panigrahy BOTANY Report on mass mortality Sanctuary, Gwalior, India 11 and Estuarine Molluscs addition Maharashtra State Malpure and S.R Yadav Nilesh V Some rare 225 and endangered plant species of Gujarat, India Taxonomic studies on some species of Oxya P S Nagar, Sachin Sata and Serville T.D Pawar (Orthoptera: Acrididae) of Kashmir Himalaya M NayyarAzim and Shabir A Reshi Cover Photograph: 216 Chromodoris fidelis By Deepak Apte ACKNOWLEDGEMENT We are grateful to the Ministry of Science and Technology, Govt of India, for enhanced financial support for the publication of the Journal ii 226 Editorial Mother Earth or Mother Water “Whiskey’s for drinking, water’s for fighting over” Though water covers more than 70 per blue planet, 97 per cent is salty remaining three per cent, two percent is locked up in snow and ice, leaving only one per cent as liquid surface and ground water for We use use two-third of this one Decades of misuse, overuse, and pollution of water has left us with a deep water crises If immediate steps change for water conservation are not taken, climate will further aggravate this crises Our water demands, and the millions of daily mutinies that we see keep growing, as human every year will grow life-style As our country Water use low as demands develops, water rises with wealth and changes in for all our rivers National may it be gallons Forty-six per cent of individuals countries, and waterbodies But looking Ganga Action result of the Plan, Ganga River Basin at the now renamed Authority, it the appears that Rs 36,000 crores have been spent on cleaning the Ganga, but the river women have every day to fetch water In to to their walk up homes to There a lack is development and environment rural importantly, there is ministries Most lack of appreciation of the ecological and environmental role of our rivers and natural water-bodies Unless we change our thinking, engineering solutions to ecological problems will not save our water resources We have whether we want engineering to decide - megadams, long solution to our water crises or pipelines, underground new technology fossil canals to extract depleting water - or, conservation approaches km which restore depleted reservoirs and aquifers, protect villages aquatic ecosystems, stop pollution of rivers, covers 8-10 many towns and In as dirty as ever is of coordination between the irrigation, hydropower, For example, an American uses 100 gallons on our planet get piped water up some our will population adds by 83 million of water daily, while in dry poor countries, as in towns and villages everyday over water, cities, river-basin approach, with conservation and sustainable-use in mind, should be developed we have a long way to go During the last two decades, grow our food per cent to A holistic cent of our and non-potable Of the — Mark Twain of India, people have to survive on limited ‘tanker- catchment areas water’ as they have already polluted or depleted their rainwater harvest, and result in equitable and fair water sources distribution of water for all communities, both Human civilization is closely linked to freshwater and non-humans ecosystems Cities, towns, villages, industries, thermal new power replacing plants, chemical plants, agriculture fields are concentrated alongside water-bodies Through decades in natural vegetative, starts sustainable (plants technologies in agriculture Hood irrigation, we ecological flow in industrial effluents and chemical pollution For over thousand years, citizens of Delhi received potable water from the now Jamuna and wells, but drinking water for Delhi comes from the and Beas rivers 400 km Ganga all rivers coming years which Rivers, wetlands and the water is now heavily human consumption Almost 43 per cent of water is unfit for There are many such examples all over India the Government of swamps make up less than on Earth Yet these waters are home Hussain Sagar built for the twin-cities its to 0.3 per cent of fresh water and less than 0.01 per cent polluted and km have hoping, without cleaning our river systems many 60 We in the is all river, minimum required for the India as and Manjira is growth of km away which remember that we cannot achieve 8-10 per cent economic away The 116 micro-sprinklers basic ecological functions of a river away Similarly, Hyderabad and Secundrabad get potable water from the Krishna (e.g developing dryland-tolerant also have to maintain the wastewater, Sabarmati are dying due to untreated sewage, nonlitter, human We though require crops), pollution cleanup and quick treatment of of neglect, the Ganga, Jamuna, Godavari, Sutlej, degradable and animals) to as 1,26,000 of the world’s animal species the 30,000 fish live in freshwater lakes and known species of rivers India has about STATUS AND CONSERVATION OF WILD BUFFALO IN PENINSULAR INDIA 2,500 fish species, of which 930 species are freshwater inhabitants Many locally extinct habitat to due species have extinct or to pollution, destruction of their and introduction of invasive species According IUCN, freshwater animals are disappearing at a rate in some places even faster As our planet becomes hotter, the melting of glaciers will increase incrementally as hot air holds more water molecules than melting of glaciers during an important role in cold Natural summer and monsoon plays maintaining the flow of these rivers On four to six times faster than animals on land or at sea, which feeds one-third of India’s population and freshwater fishes are much more threatened with term, we may have more water in our rivers, but slowly extinction than the sea fishes when the glaciers disappear, The Himalayan glaciers, covering millions of square kilometers, contain the largest the polar regions One volume of ice outside Marq de human population, that there is third of the it is they feed on Asia’s famous rivers such as the Ganges, we Mekong and Yangtze Climate change and heating of our Planet is threatening these glaciers Tibetan plateau as a whole the global average of 1.3 is The little water will be a short left to feed these mighty rivers nearly two billion people depend on these glaciers as Brahmaputra, 134 become Villiers in his enough water book water wars has for everyone on this planet, distribution and use that are the problem will clean up our watery mess and learn sustainably, or go to war clean water, only time will said Whether to use it for the precious remaining tell heating up twice as fast as F over the past century - and Asad R Rahmani J Bombay Nat Hist Soc., 106 (2), May-Aug 2009 Bombay Journal of the Natural History Society, 106(2), May-Aug 2009 135-141 ON THE DIURNAL ADVERTISEMENT CALL FREQUENCY OF HEMIDACTYLUS FRENATUS WITH ADDITIONAL REMARKS ON THE DISTRESS CALL AND CHURR CALL Dieter Gramentz 'FolderichstraBe 7, D- 13595 Berlin, Germany Email: liteblu@gmx.de November 2007 Various aspects of the bioacoustic behaviour of Hemidactylus frenatus were studied in Western Province, Sri in Aluthgama, Lanka Markedly increased production of advertisement calls was noted about 30 to 50 70 to 90 prior to complete darkness; and during most nights (n=8), peak calling was observed during dusk from 1750-1830 hrs, between sunset and complete darkness Advertisement call prior to sunset or about activity activity was found to be much reduced during nights with prolonged rain in comparison to nights without rain, and the difference was statistically significant (P , , 26.8 27.0 27.2 27,4 27.6 26.6 , , 27.8 28.0 28.2 28.4 Air temperature (°C) Fig 2: Variation of the advertisement call activity of Hemidactylus frenatus from Sri Lanka during rainy and dry nights A 0.25 0.2 0.35 s 0i3 Oscillogram of a distress call of frenatus from Sri Lanka Length of the a male Hemidactylus call is Audiospectrogram The harmonics are 0.083 sec call activity is during nights with prolonged rain without rain Minimum November 08, during was raining for in very much reduced comparison calling activity to nights was 59 calls the seven hours recording, of hr 33 (Figs and 5) it On November 12, it rained for Maximum number November Average number of advertisement calls 11, a dry night during rainy nights was 60.5 (SD=2.12; range: 59-62; n=2) Average number of calls during dry nights was 144.9 (SD=35.7; range: n=8), and there is (P

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