Nanmangalam Reserve Forest

Nanmangalam Reserve Forest is a protected area located in the southern part of Chennai, about 24 km from the city centre. It is located at Medavakkam on Velachery High Road between Velachery and Tambaram. The reserve forest has an area of 320 hectares. However, the total area of the forest is 2,400 hectares.[1]

Red-wattled lapwing

The forest is popular among bird watchers and is home to about 85 species of birds. Red-wattled Lapwing, Crested Honey Buzzard, Grey Partridge, Coucal, Indian Eagle-owl, White-breasted Kingfisher, Pied Kingfisher, Southern Bush Lark and Red-whiskered Bulbul are commonly seen birds in the area.[2]

The 320-hectare Nanmangalam Reserved Forest, located about 10 km from Velachery, is a scrubland around an abandoned granite quarry[3] and is home to some of the rare territorial orchids, according to a recent study.

The state forest department has entrusted the work of data collection in this small forest area to Care Earth, a bio-diversity research organisation. Located near Medavakkam, a rapidly developing residential locality, the forest needs immediate fencing to protect it from encroachment and to curtail any non-forestry activity there, the study says.

The neighbourhood of Nanmangalam is one of the 163 notified areas (megalithic sites) in the state of Tamil Nadu.[4] 1Accessdate:21Apr2015 Dheeran R OTTIYAMBAKKAM CHENNAI 6000126. Introduction He was last two month back shifted to there, due to he bought the land. OTTISWARAR TEMPLE, AMMAN TEMPLE CHURCHES Here living people all are good but ecpenses is very high fast developing city now ground water we get it and coock .

See also

References

  1. "After 14 years, encroachments in Nanmangalam reserve forest removed". The Times of India (Chennai: The Times Group). 30 July 2009. Retrieved 6 Jan 2012.
  2. "A forest in the urban jungle". The Hindu (Chennai: The Hindu).
  3. Padmanabhan, Geeta (9 January 2012). "Chennai's eco spots". The Hindu (Chennai: The Hindu). Retrieved 9 Jan 2012.
  4. Madhavan, D. (20 December 2012). "National Institute of Siddha modifies expansion plan". The Hindu (Chennai: The Hindu). Retrieved 23 Dec 2012.

Coordinates: 12°55′35″N 80°10′31″E / 12.926268°N 80.175176°E