Indian Wildlife Conservation Effort
Indian Wildlife Conservation Effort
Indian Wildlife Conservation Effort
MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS
EVALUATION OF PROTECTED AREAS
About
• It is defined as the assessment of how
well NP&WLS are being managed and if
they are protecting their values and
achieving the goals and objectives agreed
upon.
• The ratings are assigned in four
categories, as Poor – upto 40%; Fair - 41
to 59%; Good - 60 to 74%; Very Good –
75% and above.
MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS
EVALUATION OF PROTECTED AREAS
About
• The term ‘management effectiveness’
reflects three main themes of
Protected Areas (PAs) management:
o Design and planning issues relating to
both individual sites and PA systems.
o Adequacy and appropriateness of
management systems and processes.
o Delivery of the objectives of NP&WLS,
including conservation of values.
MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS
EVALUATION OF PROTECTED AREAS
About
• A uniform theme has been provided to
the assessments by the International
Union for Conservation of Nature
(IUCN) World Commission on
Protected Areas (WCPA) Framework
which aims both to give overall guidance
in the development of assessment
systems and to encourage basic standards
for assessment and reporting.
• WCPA Framework for Assessing
Management Effectiveness is a system
with six elements: Context, Planning,
Inputs, Processes, Outputs and Outcomes.
MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS
EVALUATION OF PROTECTED AREAS
About
• At present, India has a network of 903
protected areas covering about five
per cent of the total geographic area of
the country. India also has 70% of the
global tiger population, 70% of Asiatic
lions and more than 60% of leopard's
global population. Hence, in order to
assess the efficacy of protected areas,
evaluation of management effectiveness
is required.
MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS
EVALUATION OF PROTECTED AREAS
Findings:
• Overall Performance: The results of the
present assessment are encouraging with
an overall mean MEE score of 62.01%
which is higher than the global mean of
56%.
• Regional Performance: The eastern
region of India presents the highest
overall mean MEE Score of 66.12% and
the Northern region represents the
lowest mean MEE Score of 56%.
MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS
EVALUATION OF PROTECTED AREAS
Findings:
• Best NP&WLS: Tirthan Wildlife
Sanctuary and Great Himalayan National
Park (GNHP) in Himachal Pradesh have
performed the best among the surveyed
protected areas (Total -146).
• Worst NP&WLS: The Turtle Wildlife
Sanctuary in Uttar Pradesh was the worst
performer in the survey
MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS
EVALUATION OF PROTECTED AREAS
About
• It is proposed in the drylands of
Bankapur in Koppal district of the
Kalyana Karnataka region.
• The proposed sanctuary is good for the
conservation of not only wolves but also
striped hyena, Indian fox, gold fox and
other animals.
ELEPHANT CORRIDORS
About
• The corridor is situated in the
ecologically fragile Sigur plateau, which
connects the Western and the Eastern
Ghats and sustains elephant populations
and their genetic diversity.
• It has the Nilgiri Hills on its southwestern
side and the Moyar River Valley on its
north-eastern side. The elephants cross
the plateau in search of food and water.
ELEPHANT CORRIDORS
About
• Background: In 2013, the UNGA decided
to proclaim 3 March, the day of the
adoption of the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered
Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)
in 1973.
• Theme this year: “Forests and
Livelihoods: Sustaining People and
Planet”.
WORLD WILDLIFE DAY
• CITES Appendices:
o Appendix I: includes species threatened
with extinction. Trade in specimens of
these species is permitted only in
exceptional circumstances.
o Appendix II: includes species not
necessarily threatened with extinction,
but in which trade must be controlled in
order to avoid utilization incompatible
with their survival.
o Appendix III: contains species that are
protected in at least one country, which
has asked other CITES Parties for
assistance in controlling the trade.
DOLPHIN CENSUS
About
• The population of dolphins in Chilika,
India’s largest brackish water lake, and
along the Odisha coast has doubled this
year compared with last year.
• Three species were recorded during the
census, with 544 Irrawaddy, bottle-nose
and humpback dolphins sighted this
year, compared with 233 last year.
• The rise in the Irrawaddy dolphin
population in Chilika can be attributed to
the eviction of illegal fish enclosures.
DOLPHIN CENSUS
Irrawaddy Dolphins:
• Irrawaddy Dolphins (Orcaella
Brevirostris) are oceanic dolphins. Thus,
It resides in brackish water near coasts,
river mouths, and estuaries in South and
Southeast Asia.
• Features: They have a bulging forehead
and short beak. Further, They pop their
head out of the water to breathe.
• Habitat: It extends from the Bay of
Bengal to New Guinea and the Philippines.
DOLPHIN CENSUS
Irrawaddy Dolphins:
• Rivers: They reside in three rivers
namely The Irrawaddy (Myanmar), the
Mahakam (Indonesian Borneo), and the
Mekong.
• Population: As per estimations, there are
less than 7500 Irrawaddy Dolphins in the
world. More than 6,000 Irrawaddy
dolphins have been reported from
Bangladesh.
• IUCN Status: Endangered.
DOLPHIN CENSUS
Humpback Dolphin:
• Humpback dolphins stay in relatively
shallow nearshore waters throughout
their range. It includes most of the coastlines
in Australia, Africa, and Asia.
• Species: There are four species of
humpback dolphins with very little overlap
between their ranges:
o Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin (IUCN
Status: Vulnerable)
o Indian Ocean humpback dolphin(IUCN
Status: Endangered)
o Atlantic humpback dolphin(IUCN Status:
Critically Endangered)
o Australian humpback dolphin(IUCN
Status: Vulnerable).
DOLPHIN CENSUS
Bottlenose Dolphin:
• Further, Bottlenose dolphins are the most
common members of the family of oceanic
dolphins.
• Bottlenose dolphins inhabit warm and
temperate seas worldwide. Thus, they are
found everywhere except for the Arctic and
Antarctic Circle regions.
• Species: Following are three species of
Bottlenose dolphins:
o Common bottlenose dolphin (IUCN Status:
Least Concern)
o Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (IUCN Status:
Near Threatened)
o Burrunan dolphin (IUCN Status: Yet to be
categorised).
BLUE NATURE ALLIANCE
About
• The Blue Nature Alliance is a global
partnership of five core partners and a
few other Non-Profit Organisations.
• The core partners are Conservation
International, The Global Environment
Foundation and Rob and Melani Walton
Foundation.
BLUE NATURE ALLIANCE
About
• Aim: To safeguard global ocean
biodiversity, build resilience to climate
change, promote human well-being and
enhance ecosystem connectivity.
• Targets: The alliance has a target to:
o Conserve 18 million square kilometres of
ocean in five years.
o Protect 5% of the world’s ocean in five
years.
o Help the world achieve 30% ocean
conservation by 2030.
BLUE NATURE ALLIANCE
About
• Target Oceans: The Alliance has started
by targeting seven ocean locations. This
includes Antarctica, Fiji, Canada,
Seychelles, Palau, the Western Indian
Ocean and Tristan da Cunha, an island in
the South Atlantic Ocean.
• The alliance will begin work by working
with local communities and national
leaders. It aims to establish new marine
protected areas (MPAs) and improve the
management of existing ones.
BLUE NATURE ALLIANCE
About
• World Earth day 2021 theme ‘Restore
Our Earth’. The theme focuses on natural
processes, emerging green technologies
and innovative thinking to restore the
world’s ecosystems.
WORLD EARTH DAY
About
• The year 2021 marks the 51st
anniversary of the annual celebrations. It
was celebrated for the first time in the
year 1970. In 2009 the United Nations
designated April 22 as ‘International
Mother Earth Day’
• Aim: The celebration of earth day is to
achieve the following objectives.
o To build the world’s largest
environmental movement to drive
transformative change for people and the
planet.
WORLD EARTH DAY
About
o To diversify, educate and activate the
environmental movement worldwide.
• The activities on Earth Day are led by
earthday.org formerly known as Earth
Day Network. It is a US-based
international environmental NGO and has
a presence in 195 countries.
• Significance: The Paris Agreement
brought almost 200 countries together in
setting a common target to reduce global
greenhouse emissions. It was signed on
Earth Day 2016.
WORLD EARTH DAY
About
• The Blue Flag is one of the world’s most
recognised voluntary eco-labels awarded
to beaches, marinas, and sustainable
boating tourism operators. Blue Flag
beaches are considered the cleanest
beaches of the world
BLUE FLAG BEACHES
About
• Criteria for Certification:
o In order to qualify for the Blue Flag, a
series of stringent environmental,
educational, safety, and accessibility
criteria must be met and maintained.
o There are around 33 criteria that are to
be met to qualify for a Blue Flag
certification,
o Such as the water meeting certain quality
standards, having waste disposal
facilities, being disabled- friendly, having
first aid equipment, and no access to pets
in the main areas of the beach.
BLUE FLAG BEACHES
About
• The 10 beaches that have been awarded
the “Blue Flag Certification” in
India: Shivrajpur (Dwarka-Gujarat),
Ghoghla (Diu), Kasarkod and Padubidri
(Karnataka), Kappad (Kerala), Rushikonda
(AP), Golden (Puri-Odisha) and Radhanagar
(A&N Islands), Eden (Puducherry) and
Kovalam (Tamil Nadu).
• Denmark-based non-profit Foundation
for Environmental Education (FEE)
awards Blue Flag Certification.
• On the lines of Blue Flag certification, India
has also launched its own eco-label BEAMS
(Beach Environment & Aesthetics
Management Services).
BLUE FLAG BEACHES
BEAMS
• Beach Environment & Aesthetics
Management Services that comes under
ICZM (Integrated Coastal Zone
Management) project.
• This was launched by the Society of
Integrated Coastal Management
(SICOM) and the Union Ministry of
Environment, Forest and Climate Change
(MoEFCC)
BLUE FLAG BEACHES
BEAMS
• Its objective is to:
o Abate pollution in coastal waters.
o Promote sustainable development of
beach facilities.
o Protect and conserve coastal ecosystems
and natural resources.
o Maintain high standards of cleanliness,
hygiene and safety for beachgoers in
accordance with coastal environment and
regulations.
BLUE FLAG BEACHES
About
• A cryptogam is a plant that reproduces
with the help of spores. The word
"Cryptogamae" implies ‘hidden
reproduction', referring to the fact that
they do not produce any reproductive
structure, seed, or flower.
INDIA’S FIRST CRYPTOGAMIC GARDEN
About
• Due to this, they are called "flowerless" or
"seedless plants" or ‘lower plants'. They
need a moist environment to survive.
These are present in aquatic and
terrestrial places.
• Algae, bryophytes, lichens, ferns and fungi
are the best-known groups of cryptogams.
• Classification of
Cryptogams: Cryptogams are classified
into 3 groups based on the various
structural and functional criteria of the
plant.
INDIA’S FIRST CRYPTOGAMIC GARDEN
Thallophyta:
• Thallophyta is a division of the plant
kingdom including primitive forms of
plant life showing a simple plant body.
They lack roots, stems, or leaves.
• It includes algae-like Spirogyra,
Sargassum, etc.
• They are predominantly aquatic and
found both in marine as well as
freshwater habitats.
INDIA’S FIRST CRYPTOGAMIC GARDEN
Bryophyta:
• Bryophytes comprise a limited variety of
non-vascular land plants. They prefer
moist habitats but they can survive in dry
environments too. Example- hornworts,
liverworts, mosses, etc.
• They occupy an intermediate position
between algae and pteridophytes.
• Since bryophytes can survive in both
water and land, they are considered as
the 'amphibians of the plant kingdom'.
INDIA’S FIRST CRYPTOGAMIC GARDEN
Pteridophyta:
• A pteridophyte is a vascular plant that
disperses spores. It is the first plant to
have xylem and phloem.
• Ferns are the largest living group of
primitive vascular plants.
About
• A tiger corridor is a stretch of land which
links 2 or more tiger habitats, allowing
the movement of tigers, prey, and other
wildlife. Without corridors, tiger habitat
can become fragmented, and tiger
populations isolated.
TIGER CORRIDOR
About
• This census will be Conducted by World
Wide Fund for Nature (WWF-India) in
partnership with Bombay Natural
History Society (BNHS), United Nations
Environment Programme, Zoological
Survey of India and others.
• Aim: To spread awareness about the
importance of the Dragonfly species to
the overall ecosystem.
DRAGONFLY CENSUS 2021
About
• The first Dragonfly census was carried
out in 2018 which revealed a total of 51
different species of these insects in New
Delhi and NCR.
• Dragonfly:
o Dragonfly is an insect belonging to the order
Odonata.
o They are most commonly found near
freshwater habitats throughout most of the
world.
• Significance: Dragonflies act as important
bio-indicators of the ecological health of an
area. As they feed on mosquitoes and other
insects that are vectors to life-threatening
diseases like Malaria and Dengue.
DRAGONFLY CENSUS 2021
Bioindicators:
• Bioindicators are living organisms such as
plants, plankton, animals, and microbes,
which are used to assess the health of the
natural ecosystem in the environment.
• Examples of Bioindicators:
o Lichens are powerful Bioindicators of air
quality.
o Frogs are basically influenced by changes
that take place in their freshwater and
terrestrial habitats.
o Algae blooms are often used to indicate
large increases of nitrates and phosphates
in lakes and rivers.
BEHLER TURTLE CONSERVATION
AWARD