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Rhino Conservation in India

The document discusses rhino protection efforts in India. It outlines the different rhino species found in Asia and Africa, with a focus on the Indian rhinoceros. The majority of the world's Indian rhino population is found in Assam, India, with efforts to expand their habitat and establish a DNA database. Translocations are used to mitigate threats like poaching and reduce populations in overcrowded areas. The Special Rhino Protection Force was established to combat poachers in Kaziranga National Park.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views15 pages

Rhino Conservation in India

The document discusses rhino protection efforts in India. It outlines the different rhino species found in Asia and Africa, with a focus on the Indian rhinoceros. The majority of the world's Indian rhino population is found in Assam, India, with efforts to expand their habitat and establish a DNA database. Translocations are used to mitigate threats like poaching and reduce populations in overcrowded areas. The Special Rhino Protection Force was established to combat poachers in Kaziranga National Park.

Uploaded by

AbhinawSingh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

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Rhino ProtectionCin India
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By Abhinaw Singh

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RHINOCEROS

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➢ Africa: Black Rhinoceros, White Rhinoceros and Nile
Rhinoceros
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➢ Asia: Javan, Sumatran, Indian
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❖The Sumatran Rhinoceros C
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✓ Smallest and most endangered
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✓ Extinct in India
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❖The Javan Rhinoceros
✓ Extinct in India
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✓ Small number survive in Java and Vietnam
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INDIAN RHINOCEROS
➢ The Great one-horned rhinoceros(Rhinoceros
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unicornis)
➢ Vulnerable -IUCN
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➢ CITES Appendix I
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➢ Schedule 1 of WPA 1972
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➢ Close to 85% of the total population occurs in India,

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with about 91% in the state of Assam
➢ Commonly found in Nepal, Bhutan, Pakistan and in
India P
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➢ The Indian Rhinoceros can run at speeds of up to 25
mph (40 km/h) for short periods of time and is also

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an excellent swimmer
➢ It has excellent senses of hearing and smell, but
relatively poor eyesight
Range Description Habitat & Ecology Major threat

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Range Description Habitat
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Northern part – India along Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra
basin includes Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh,
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PakistanRiverine grassland - Terai. Alluvial grass land -
swamps & forest

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Ecology Major threat
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Habitat loss, habitat fragmentation, poaching for
horn-medicinal use in China and SE countries
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One Horned Rhino Distribution

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HABITAT IN INDIA
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➢Found only in the tall grasslands and forests in
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the foothills of the Himalayas (Terai region)
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➢In India, rhinos are mainly found in Kaziranga
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NP, Pobitara WLS, Orang NP, Manas NP in
Assam, Jaldapara NP and Garumara NP in

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West Bengal and Dudhwa TR in Uttar Pradesh.

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HABITAT IN ASSAM

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or
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HABITAT IN WB

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P
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HABITAT IN UP

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DNA DATABASE FOR INDIAN RHINOS

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➢ MoEFCC- project to create DNA profiles of all
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rhinos in the country
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➢ By 2021(deadline) the Indian rhino could be the
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first wild animal species in India to have all its
members DNA-sequenced
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➢ The project will help in curbing poaching and
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gathering evidence in wildlife crimes involving
rhinos
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➢ The database will be hosted in the Wildlife
Institute of India (WII) headquarters in Dehradun
NATIONAL RHINO CONSERVATION STRATEGY

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➢ Calls for active engagement between India and Nepal to
conserve the Greater one-horned rhinoceros
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➢ The plan said the single population of rhinos in Sukla-Phanta
(Nepal), Valmiki Tiger Reserve (India) and Chitwan National
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Park (Nepal) and Dudhwa (India) is separated by the political

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boundary between the two countries
➢ It asks for the management of the two population under the

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same protocol, instead of managing the two population
separately

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➢ The plan calls for expanding distribution range as the

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occurrence of 90% of the rhino in one protected area is a
cause of concern and conservation of existing and potential
rhino habitats need to be made a national priority
INDIAN RHINO VISION
Launched in 2005
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➢Implemented by :
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❑Department of environment and forests, Assam,
❑The Bodo autonomous council as a active partner.
➢Supported by: o r
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❑WWF – India, WWF areas (Asian rhino and elephant action strategy)

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programme,
❑the international rhino foundation (IRF),

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❑ save the rhino’s campaign of zoological institutions worldwide
❑number of local NGOs likeUS Fish & Wildlife Service

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➢ VISION: To increase the total rhino foundation in Assam from about 2000 to
3000 by the year 2020

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➢To ensure that these rhinos are distributed over at least 7 protected areas (PA)
to provide long term viability of the one-horned rhino population

➢Assam has an estimated 2,645 rhinos in all (2018)


TRANSLOCATIONS
species to risks of calamities (epidemics, floods, massive poaching attempts)
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➢Concentrating so many rhinos in a single protected area like Kaziranga exposes the

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➢Rhinos in Pabitora have exceeded carrying capacity and numbers must be reduced

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to protect the habitat and to mitigate the increasing rhino-human conflicts

➢ Activities: Anti-poaching, monitoring, translocations, community conservation

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➢ Translocations are the backbone of the IRV 2020 program

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➢GOAL: to translocate Rhinos from Kaziranga National Park and Pabitora Wildlife

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Sanctuary to five other protected areas namely Manas, Laokhowa, Buracharpori-
Kochmora, Dibrusaikhowa and Orang

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➢ According to World Wildlife fund data of 2012, Assam has 91% of total Rhino
population of India which is mainly concentrated in Kaziranga National Park, and a few

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in Pobitara Wildlife Sanctuary.
Kaziranga National Park in Assam, India, holds about 70% of the world population. IRV

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2020 aims

➢Manas National Park was selected as the first site for translocation of rhinos
FACTS ON THREATS

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➢ The extent and quality of the rhino’s most important
habitat, alluvial grassland and riverine forest, is considered
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to be in decline due to human and livestock encroachment
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➢ The Indian rhinoceros once ranged throughout the entire
stretch of the Indo-Gangetic Plain, but excessive hunting

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and agricultural development reduced their range
drastically to 11 sites in northern India and southern Nepal

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➢ As a result of habitat destruction and climatic changes their

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range has gradually been reduced so that by the 19th
century, they only survived in the Terai grasslands of

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southern Nepal, northern Uttar Pradesh, northern Bihar,
northern Bengal, and in the Brahmaputra Valley of Assam
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CURRENT AFFAIRS

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➢ Special Rhino Protection Force(SRPF) trained to combat poachers and
understand animal behaviour was deployed in the Kaziranga National Park

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➢ The force has been raised by the initiative of both the central and state
governments to control rhino poaching in tiger reserve

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➢ The process of setting up the special force was started in 2015 on the

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recommendations of the National Tiger Conservation Authority

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➢ The great one-horned rhino or Indian Rhino is the largest of the rhino
species found commonly in Nepal, Bhutan, Pakistan and India, with India
being home to 2,200 rhinos, or over 85% of the population

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➢ Rhinos in India are found in parts of Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal and

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Assam

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