Nature takes a breather

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
As the world went into lockdown to curb the coronavirus pandemic, the environment got a chance to rejuvenate Factories were/are closed
Malls, restaurants and stores shut down
Aeroplanes were grounded
A few vehicles plied on empty roads
About 20 per cent of the world were forced indoors as lockdown was imposed
Nobody thought the world could come to a standstill as economy took a backseat. But it did
And the only positive fallout in whole COVID-19 situation was for the environment. The smog-layered skies above most major cities were clear
blue for the first time in years
This was evident from our terraces and in pictures that were shared on social media
We were offered a stunning view of the Himalayas
The sightings of Mt Everest from Kathmandu Valley as well as Bihar, India also made the rounds on social media. Meanwhile, with humans
indoors, there were news that deer and monkeys are venturing out to explore Asianow-empty urban jungles, songbirds were heard in cities, and
great leatherback turtles laying eggs on Phuket beaches in record numbers. Here is how the environment and its biodiversity rediscovered
their natural spaces. Carbon crash The biggest carbon crash ever recorded was within a few months into lockdown in many parts of the world
due to the pandemic
No war, no recession, no previous pandemic has had such a dramatic impact on emissions of CO2 over the past century as Covid-19 has in a few
short months. Multiple sources indicate we are now living through an unrivalled drop in carbon output, the BBC reported in May
But even though we will see a massive fall this year, the concentrations of CO2 that are in the atmosphere and warming our planet won&t
stabilise until the world reaches net-zero. The global expansion of emissions of CO2, from the use of oil, gas and coal has risen massively
in the last 100 years
But a number of events have shown that dramatic falls in carbon are possible
Much is made of the financial crash in 2008-2009, but in reality, carbon emissions only fell by around 450 million tonnes between 2008 and
2009
This is much smaller than the fall in CO2 in the aftermath of World War II, which saw a drop of around 800 million tonnes. It is also
smaller than the global recession in the early 1980s
During this period, CO2 went down by around one billion tonnes
But the coronavirus pandemic of 2020 dwarves all of these previous shocks by some distance. In a few months, demand for energy globally has
fallen off a cliff. The International Energy Agency (IEA) says that the world will use six per cent less this year — equivalent to losing
the entire energy demand of India
This will feed through to large falls in CO2
A number of different analyses, including this one from Carbon Brief, show that emissions this year will fall by four to eight per cent,
somewhere between two and three billion tonnes of the warming gas. Researchers say the biggest thing hitting CO2 emissions right now is the
reduction in road transport. Moreover, two new studies, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, found that nitrogen dioxide
pollution over northern China, Western Europe and the US decreased by as much as 60 per cent in early 2020 as compared to the same time last
year
NASA and the European Space Agencypollution monitoring satellites show a 30 per cent drop in nitrogen dioxide in China since the outbreak of
coronavirus. Ganges cleans up The Ganges is one Indiaholiest and also most-polluted rivers
Millions live on its banks across several states
Itwidely considered as a lifeline for many Indians
But it has become severely polluted in the past few decades — industrial effluent is regularly emptied into the waters, as is waste from
the millions of people who live alongside its banks
The government has spent millions of dollars to clean up the river, but with very little success. But the lockdown meant to curb the spread
of the coronavirus appears to have helped
Water of River Ganga was been found fit enough for drinking purposes after decades, revealed a recent research by Indian Institute of
Technology, Roorkee. &Since the lockdown, anthropological activities in the vicinity of river have dropped to zero
This has enabled the river to breathe,& said RK Kathait, regional officer of Uttrakhand Environment Pollution Control Board. Due to the
lockdown, 22 drains which disposed sewage into the river, had been sealed too, hence making the water cleaner. However, chlorination was
advised before the water of the river to be used for drinking. Sightings of rare animals Travel curbs ranging from a ban on international
flights to an appeal to citizens to stay home brought a collapse in tourist numbers in Thailand, but freed up the beaches for wildlife
The country found the largest number of nests of rare leatherback sea turtles in two decades on beaches bereft of tourists because of the
coronavirus pandemic, environmentalists said in April. The 11 turtle nests authorities found since last November were the highest number in
20 years, said Kongkiat Kittiwatanawong, director of the Phuket Marine Biological Center. &This is a very good sign for us because many
areas for spawning have been destroyed by humans,& he told Reuters
No such nests had been found for the previous five years. &If we compare to the year before, we didn&t have this many spawn, because turtles
have a high risk of getting killed by fishing gear and humans disturbing the beach.& Leatherbacks are the worldlargest sea turtles
They are considered endangered in Thailand, and listed as a vulnerable species globally by the International Union for Conservation of
Nature
They lay their eggs in dark and quiet areas, scarce when tourists thronged the beaches
People have also been known to dig into their nests and steal eggs. Late in March, staff at a national park in the southern province of
Phanga Nga bordering the Andaman Sea found 84 hatchlings after monitoring eggs for two months. Reports from rangers and gardeners in the UK
include peregrine falcons nesting in the ancient ruins of Corfe Castle in Dorset, English partridges rootling around an empty car park near
Cambridge, and a cuckoo calling at Osterley Park in west London, having not been heard there for 20 years. David Brown, the National
Trustecologist at Corfe Castle, told The Guardian in May: &This is the first time peregrines have nested here since the 1980s
With the site the quietest it has ever been, the great curtain walls are an ideal spot for these birds, which look for isolated and
inaccessible places to build a nest
Amongst all the uncertainty, it has been heartening to see nature colonising the landscape in our absence.& In France, a maritime patrol has
filmed remarkable images of whales powering through Mediterranean waters off the coast of southern France
A graceful pair of fin whales was filmed on April 7 in waters off the Calanques National Park, a protected reserve of outstanding natural
beauty next to the usually bustling but now locked-down Mediterranean port city of Marseille. Didier Reault, who heads the park board, told
Associated Press, it is &very, very rare& for fin whales to be spotted and filmed at such close quarters in the reservewaters. The whales
usually stay further out in deeper Mediterranean waters but seem to have been drawn in by the lockdown-driven freeze on maritime traffic,
water sports, pleasure fishing and pleasure craft, Reault said. Animals come out on the streets As humans retreated into their homes as more
and more countries went under coronavirus lockdown, wild animals were slipping cover to explore the empty streets of some of our biggest
cities
Wild boar descended from the hills around Barcelona while deer were nosing their way around the quieter train stations of Nara,
Japan. Indian social media went wild about footage of a stag scampering through Dehradun, the capital of the northern state of
Uttarakhand. Gangs of wild turkeys were strutting the streets of Oakland, California, while a puma turned up in the centre of the Chilean
capital Santiago, which was under curfew. Blandine Doligez, a researcher from the Laboratory of Biometrics and Evolutionary Biology (LBBE)
of the University of Lyon 1, specialises in the study of birds
She told Euronews that this government-imposed lockdown was indeed conducive to animals changing their habits to venture out of &their usual
bases&. &Studies carried out in urban areas on bird populations have already highlighted the role of the level of disturbance, such as the
intensity of human passage near nests, on different parameters of the reproduction,& she explained. She noted for instance that birds in
cities have been shown to sing more on Saturdays and Sundays because the level of disturbance from humans is lower than on weekdays. The
presence of humans is not the only source of disturbance for birds, she stressed, &the same is also observed for sources of noises,
chemical, light pollution&. A version of this article appears in e-paper on June 19, 2020, of The Himalayan Times. The post Nature takes a
breather appeared first on The Himalayan Times.