Tsewang Namgail
Wageningen University and Research Centre
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Featured researches published by Tsewang Namgail.
Ecological Research | 2007
Tsewang Namgail; Joseph L. Fox; Yash Veer Bhatnagar
Livestock production is the primary source of livelihood and income in most of the high steppe and alpine regions of the Indian Trans-Himalaya. In some areas, especially those established or proposed for biodiversity conservation, recent increases in populations of domestic livestock, primarily sheep and goats, have raised concern about domestic animals competitively excluding wild herbivores from the rangelands. We evaluated the influence of domestic sheep and goat grazing on the habitat use and time budget of the endangered Tibetan argali Ovis ammon hodgsoni in the proposed Gya-Miru Wildlife Sanctuary, Ladakh, India. We asked if the domestic sheep and goat grazing and collateral human activities relegate the argali to sub-optimal habitats, and alter their foraging time budgets. Data were collected on habitat use and time budget of a population of c. 50 argalis before and after c. 2,000 sheep and goats moved onto their winter pasture in the Tsabra catchment of the aforementioned reserve. Following the introduction of domestic sheep and goats, argalis continued to use the same catchment but shifted to steeper habitats, closer to cliffs, with lower vegetation cover, thus abandoning previously used plant communities with denser cover. Argalis’ active time spent foraging also decreased by 10% in response to the presence of livestock. These results suggest a clear disturbance effect of livestock on argalis, and indicate a potential for competition, conceivably a significant disadvantage for argalis in winter when forage availability is minimal.
Journal of Plant Research | 2012
Tsewang Namgail; Gopal S. Rawat; Charudutt Mishra; Sipke E. van Wieren; Herbert H. T. Prins
A non-linear relationship between phytodiversity and altitude has widely been reported, but the relationship between phytomass and altitude remains little understood. We examined the phytomass and diversity of vascular plants along altitudinal gradients on the dry alpine rangelands of Ladakh, western Himalaya. We used generalized linear and generalized additive models to assess the relationship between these vegetation parameters and altitude. We found a hump-shaped relationship between aboveground phytomass and altitude. We suspect that this is engendered by low rainfall and trampling/excessive grazing at lower slopes by domestic livestock, and low temperature and low nutrient levels at higher slopes. We also found a unimodal relationship between plant species-richness and altitude at a single mountain as well as at the scale of entire Ladakh. The species-richness at the single mountain peaked between 5,000 and 5,200xa0m, while it peaked between 3,500 and 4,000xa0m at entire Ladakh level. Perhaps biotic factors such as grazing and precipitation are, respectively, important in generating this pattern at the single mountain and entire Ladakh.
Journal of Ornithology | 2009
Tsewang Namgail; Yoram Yom-Tov
We studied the effects of body mass, status (resident or migratory) and diet on the breeding elevation range and timing of reproduction of the birds in the Trans-Himalayan region of Ladakh, northwestern India. Most of breeding birds of Ladakh are Palearctic or breed at high elevations in the mountains. There is a small proportion of Oriental species, and no bird is endemic to this region. We found that heavier birds tended to start their egg-laying earlier than lighter ones. Since body mass is related to the length of incubation and nesting periods, it would appear that one result of this phenomenon is that the time of peak demand for food for most birds coincides with peak food abundance in summer. Status affected the elevation of the breeding range, with resident birds tending to breed at higher elevations than summer visitors. Residents and summer breeders also differed significantly in their diet composition, with the former feeding mainly on plants and seeds, and the latter feeding on molluscs, insects and worms.
Human Ecology | 2007
Tsewang Namgail; Yash Veer Bhatnagar; Charudutt Mishra; Sumanta Bagchi
Wild Rangelands: Conserving Wildlife While Maintaining Livestock in Semi-Arid Ecosystems | 2009
Charudutt Mishra; Sumanta Bagchi; Tsewang Namgail; Yash Veer Bhatnagar
Diversity and Distributions | 2009
Tsewang Namgail; Charudutt Mishra; Christine B. de Jong; Sipke E. van Wieren; Herbert H. T. Prins
Natural Resources Forum | 2010
Tsewang Namgail; Sipke E. van Wieren; Herbert H. T. Prins
Journal of Arid Environments | 2010
Tsewang Namgail; S.E. van Wieren; Charudutt Mishra; Herbert H. T. Prins
Current Zoology | 2013
Tsewang Namgail; S.E. van Wieren; Herbert H. T. Prins
Snow Leopards: Biodiversity of the world: Conservation from genes to landscapes | 2016
Charudutt Mishra; Yash Veer Bhatnagar; Pranav Trivedi; Radhika Timbadia; Ajay Bijoor; Ranjini Murali; Karma Sonam; Tanzin Thinley; Tsewang Namgail; Herbert H. T. Prins