The report, published by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), says that in most instances the development planning process in the "world's most heavily populated biodiversity hotspot" does not consider the requirements of freshwater ecosystems, mainly due to a lack of adequate information on the distribution of species.
"Although many protected areas are located within or near areas of the richest freshwater diversity, the southern Western Ghats region experiences the highest level of threat to freshwater species," says the study, titled 'Status and Distribution of Freshwater Biodiversity'.
It says the highest number of threatened species (40 and 48 species within each sub-catchment) occur in the southern Western Ghats hotspot in Kerala, Tamil Nadu and southern Karnataka.
"Close to 16 per cent of the 1,146 freshwater taxa assessed are threatened with extinction, with a further 1.9 per cent assessed as near threatened. No taxa were assessed as extinct or extinct in the wild," the study says.
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According to the report, the main threats impacting freshwater biodiversity in the Western Ghats include "pollution, with approximately 50 per cent of fish, 20 per cent of molluscs, and 21 per cent of odonates threatened, and with urban and domestic pollution ranking as the worst threats followed by agricultural and industrial sources of pollution."
Residential and commercial development, dams and other natural system modifications, energy production and mining are the main threats impacting freshwater species of the hills.