Udupi: 5-yr-old boy drowns in quarry pit; mother too dies in rescue bid

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April 25, 2017

Udupi, Apr 25: A 30-year-old woman and her five-year-old child were drowned in a stone quarrying pit filled with water at Padualevoor in Alevoor village in Udupi district on Tuesday.

pit 1

Neelavva had gone to wash clothes at the stone quarrying pit. Her five-year-old son Hanumanth had accompanied her.

She had left the child to play around while she was washing the clothes. The child accidentally slipped into the water in the pit. Neelavva rushed to save her son. But both were drowned. The incident took place around 11.30 a.m.

The local people called the Fire and Emergency Services. However, the two bodies were later recovered from the pit by a team of local divers, led by Ashok, an autorickshaw driver.

The bodies were shifted to the District Government Hospital here for post-mortem. Neelavva belonged to Aihole in Hungund taluk of Bagalkot district. She had married Yammunar, who works as a mason here and is hearing impaired, about nine years ago. Yammunar was inconsolable after learning about the death of his wife and child.

Yammunar and Neelavva had three children, two daughters and a son. Yammunar stayed with his two brothers and their families in a small house on 1.75 cents of land provided by the government at Padualevoor. There are a total of 12 members of the joint family staying in three rooms of the house.

Though hailing from North Karnataka, the family had settled down here for the last 20 years. There are about 70 families of migrant workers in this area. Although stone quarrying was going on at Padualevoor for about four decades, it had stopped in the last couple of years.

A board too had been installed near the pit stating that diving and swimming was prohibited in the pit, which is said to be about 40 ft deep. Some women from these migrant families washed their clothes at this pit. Usually, they went to wash after the men in their houses went to work. Some men also swam in this pit as it was wide, despite the warning on the board against it.

pit 2

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News Network
December 7,2025

SHRIMP.jpg

Mangaluru, Dec 7: A rare bamboo shrimp has been rediscovered on mainland India more than 70 years after it was last reported, confirming for the first time the presence of Atyopsis spinipes in the country. The find was made by researchers from the Centre for Climate Change Studies at Sathyabama Institute of Science and Technology, Chennai, during surveys in Karnataka and Odisha.

The team — shrimp expert Dr S Prakash, PhD scholar K Kunjulakshmi, and Mangaluru-based researcher Maclean Antony Santos — combined field surveys, ecological assessments and DNA analysis to identify the elusive species. Their findings, published in Zootaxa, resolve decades of taxonomic confusion stemming from a 1951 report that misidentified the species as Atyopsis moluccensis without strong evidence.

The shrimp has now been confirmed at two locations: the Mulki–Pavanje estuary near Mangaluru and the Kuakhai River in Bhubaneswar. Historical specimens from the Andaman Islands, previously labelled as A. moluccensis, were also found to be misidentified and actually belong to A. spinipes.

The rediscovery began after an aquarium hobbyist in Odisha spotted a shrimp in 2022, prompting systematic surveys across Udupi, Karwar and Mangaluru. Four female specimens were collected in Mulki and one in Odisha, all genetically matching.

Researchers warn the species may exist in very small, vulnerable populations as freshwater habitats face increasing pressure from pollution, sand mining and infrastructure development. All verified specimens have been deposited with the Zoological Survey of India for future reference.

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