#ECHOES OF NATURE
Events Over Ecosystems: The Tragedy of Lost Biodiversity
Lost Biodiversity: When Celebrations Cost Nature
MG Park in Manikonda was once a vibrant ecosystem, home to over 50 species of birds, butterflies, and countless pollinators. It served as a living sanctuary an urban retreat where nature thrived.
But over the past two years, the park has witnessed a steady decline in biodiversity. The reason? Frequent religious and cultural events that disrupt natural habitats with loudspeakers, gatherings, and altered landscapes.
What was once a quiet refuge for wildlife has become a stage for human activity forcing birds to migrate, pollinators to vanish, and delicate ecosystems to collapse.
It’s time we rethink how we use shared green spaces. Parks are not just for people; they are lifelines for biodiversity. Restoring balance means respecting nature’s space and protecting it from conflict-driven intrusion.
Let’s give MG Park back to its original residents, the birds, the bees, and the beauty of the wild.
Echoes of Nature: A Park’s Cry for Balance
MG Park once echoed with the flutter of wings and the rustle of leaves. Today, those sounds are fading drowned by human noise and disruption.