Bangalore:
Fast losing its garden city tag, Bangalore will host a one-day international conference onsparrows on March 20 aimed at creating awareness about the depleting green cover and bringing back the little birds.
"Sparrows are a key indicator of natural eco system of any region. In fact the quality of air that we breathe isdetermined by the sparrows that inhabit that particular region", Chandrashekar Hariharan, Executive Chairman ofBiodiversity Conservation India Ltd also called ZED habitat, organisers, told reporters.
He said main purpose of the conference was to converge research from across the globe to provide better perspectiveand dynamism in decoding the ecology and life of sparrows.
The conference, which coincides with the International Sparrow Day, will see a gathering of global scientists, birdwatchers, ornithologists, academicians, key government and forest officials, environmentalists, wildlife enthusiasts,policy makers and administrators.
"Our aim is not just to invite the experts but citizens who are leading public welfare initiatives like representatives oflocal residents' associations and ward councillors and give them special steps that they can take engender biodiversity intheir urban pockets", Hariharan
The other purpose is to recommend specific measures to the state government to check environment degradation.
Dr A K Chakravarthy, Head of Entymology Gandhi Krishi Vignan Kendra (GKVK), co-organiser of the conference, lamentedthat Bangalore, which was once a haven for sparrows, with its typical nesting spaces like the shrubs and bushes, wasincreasingly being stripped off its green cover.
Some of the key speakers at the event would be Carol Inskip, Ornithologist and author of "Pocket Guide to Birds ofthe Indian Subcontinent" and Andrew Pettit, researcher and ornithologist from Switzerland.
The conference will see a participation of around 1,200 delegates, including 250 from overseas.