Content
- Flying Rivers
- Environmental Surveillance
- Farmer Suicides in India
- E-Waste & Health Hazards
- Safeguarding India’s Digital Economy
- Accidental Deaths & Natural Hazards
- Snow Leopard Survey in Himachal Pradesh
Flying Rivers
Context
- Why in News: Deforestation in the southern Amazon is weakening the “flying rivers,” threatening regional rainfall, agriculture, and ecosystem stability.
- Definition: Streams of water vapor carried by air currents, originating from the Amazon rainforest and moving westwards.
- Mechanism:
- Moisture evaporates from the Atlantic Ocean.
- Trade winds push this moist air inland across the Amazon.
- Trees act like pumps: absorb water through roots → release moisture via transpiration → amplify rainfall inland.
- This cycle transfers vast amounts of water thousands of kilometers across South America, particularly to the Andes and beyond.
- Coined: The term was introduced in 2006 by Brazilian climate scientist Carlos Nobre and colleagues.
Relevance
- GS Paper 1 (Geography): Climate systems, rainfall cycles, forest ecosystems.
- GS Paper 3 (Environment, Disaster Management): Deforestation, climate resilience, carbon sinks, tipping points.

Why Flying Rivers Matter
- Rainfall Dependency:
- Southern Brazil, Peru, Bolivia, and even agricultural regions in Argentina depend on this transported rainfall.
- Amazon’s Role:
- Acts as a continental-scale climate regulator.
- Prevents regions from extreme droughts by redistributing water.
- Global Climate Stability:
- Amazon is a carbon sink, storing billions of tons of CO₂.
- If destabilized → worsens global warming.
- Indigenous & Local Communities:
- Depend on stable rainfall cycles for farming, fishing, and water security.
Threats to Flying Rivers
- Deforestation:
- Tree loss reduces transpiration → weaker water vapor transport.
- Southern Amazon (Peru, northern Bolivia, Brazil’s Cerrado borderlands) most affected.
- Forest Fires: Intensify water cycle disruption.
- Degradation: Not just clear-cutting, but selective logging also weakens moisture recycling.
- Tipping Point Risk:
- Scientists warn the Amazon may shift to a savanna ecosystem (drier, grassland-like).
- Consequences: biodiversity collapse + carbon release.
Implications
- Regional:
- Agriculture in Brazil, Peru, and Bolivia threatened by irregular rainfall.
- Increased risk of drought in southern Amazon, Pampas, and even hydropower-reliant regions.
- Global:
- Amazon loses its function as a CO₂ sink → accelerates global climate change.
- Weather instability far beyond South America (teleconnections in global atmospheric circulation).
- Socio-political:
- Indigenous communities face livelihood collapse.
- Water security crises may trigger migration and conflicts.
Scientific Findings & Warnings
- Matt Finer (MAAP – Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project):
- Identified hotspots in southern Peru & northern Bolivia.
- Warns conservation must go beyond land — protect atmospheric flows.
- Carlos Nobre:
- Advocates zero deforestation immediately.
- Calls for restoration of at least 0.5 million sq. km of degraded forest.
- Research Trend: Shift from looking at land alone → viewing atmosphere-forest interaction as one ecosystem.
Solutions Suggested
- Zero Deforestation Policy: No tolerance for logging, fires, and land degradation.
- Large-scale Forest Restoration: Half a million sq. km minimum to stabilize cycles.
- New Conservation Categories: Not just land parks but “atmospheric conservation areas” to protect flying rivers.
- International Cooperation:
- Amazon is not just regional → it’s a global climate commons.
- Requires regional alliances (Brazil, Peru, Bolivia, Colombia) + global financing (climate funds, carbon credits).
Broader Lessons for India & World
- Forests as Climate Pumps: Reinforces importance of Western Ghats, Himalayas in India’s monsoon dynamics.
- Tipping Points: Once reached, irreversible ecosystem change (rainforest → savanna) will occur.
- Governance: Shows limits of conventional conservation — need eco-hydrological approaches that safeguard water-atmosphere systems.
- SDGs Link: Directly impacts SDG-6 (water), SDG-13 (climate), SDG-15 (life on land).
Environmental Surveillance
Context
- Why in News: India’s expansion of environmental pathogen monitoring (wastewater, soil, audio signals) for early detection of infectious diseases and variants.
- Definition: Monitoring pathogens (viruses, bacteria, parasites) in environmental samples like sewage, soil, hospital effluents, or even audio signatures (cough recordings).
- Purpose: Detect hidden circulation of infectious agents in a community before clinical cases surge.
- Approach: Complements traditional clinical surveillance by capturing infections from both symptomatic and asymptomatic individuals.
Relevance
- GS Paper 2 (Health, Governance): Public health systems, disease surveillance, pandemic preparedness.
- GS Paper 3 (Science & Tech, Environment): Environmental sampling technologies, data science, epidemiology.
Why Environmental Surveillance is Important
- Early Warning System: Pathogen levels in wastewater rise days to weeks before clinical cases peak.
- Captures Asymptomatic Carriers: Traditional surveillance misses those not tested or with mild symptoms.
- Real-time Tracking: Enables daily/weekly updates of community infection burden.
- Variant Detection: Genome sequencing of pathogens in wastewater reveals emerging mutations or new variants (COVID-19 example).
- Cost-Effective: One sewage sample can represent thousands of people — far cheaper than mass clinical testing.
- Programmatic Integration: Helps allocate hospital beds, medicines, vaccines, and public health resources in advance.
How Wastewater Sampling Works
- Sources of Samples:
- Sewage treatment plants
- Hospital effluents
- Public toilets, railway stations, airplanes
- Process:
- Rigorous collection protocols → lab analysis → PCR tests or sequencing → pathogen load quantified.
- Pathogens Monitored: Viruses (COVID-19, Polio, Influenza, Hepatitis A/E, Rotavirus), bacteria (Cholera, Typhoid), parasites (hookworm, roundworm).
Indian Experience & ICMR’s Initiative
- Polio Surveillance: First wastewater program in Mumbai, 2001, crucial in polio eradication.
- COVID-19: Environmental monitoring was initiated in five Indian cities; continued post-pandemic for variant tracking.
- ICMR 2025 Plan:
- Surveillance for 10 viruses (includes avian influenza, polio, COVID-19, hepatitis, etc.)
- Across 50 cities, with standardised protocols.
- Current Gaps:
- Limited data sharing across institutions.
- Lack of national template/framework for surveillance.
- Mostly project-driven, not integrated into national health surveillance systems.
Global Practices & Lessons
- 40+ years of use: Wastewater-based epidemiology used worldwide for measles, cholera, and polio.
- COVID-19: Countries like Netherlands, USA, and Australia ran nationwide wastewater monitoring networks to anticipate case surges.
- Global Health Security: Helps detect imported pathogens (airplane wastewater sampling for SARS-CoV-2).
Emerging Frontiers in Environmental Surveillance
- Audio Surveillance: Using cough recordings in public spaces + AI/ML to predict prevalence of respiratory diseases.
- Soil & River Sampling: For parasitic infections, AMR (antimicrobial resistance), and zoonotic spillovers.
- Metagenomics: Identifies novel pathogens from environmental samples before outbreaks occur.
Challenges for India
- Technical: Standardised protocols for collection, storage, sequencing.
- Institutional: Need a national wastewater surveillance framework, not scattered projects.
- Data Integration: Must link environmental data with Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP).
- Funding & Capacity: Sustained investments needed; avoid short-lived project cycles.
- Privacy & Ethics: Must ensure aggregate data use; no targeting of specific communities.
Way Forward
- Develop National Wastewater Surveillance System (NWSS): On the lines of US CDC’s program.
- Integrate into IDSP & Health Grid: Combine environmental and clinical surveillance.
- Open Data Protocols: Standard templates across states/institutions.
- Expand to Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Tracking: Major emerging health threat.
- International Collaboration: Share methods and results with WHO’s Global Environmental Surveillance Network.
Farmer Suicides in India
NCRB Findings (2023)
- Why in News: NCRB 2023 data shows persistent agrarian distress with over 10,000 farm-related suicides, concentrated in Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Andhra Pradesh.
- Total suicides in India: 1,71,418
- From farming sector: 10,786 (≈6.3% of total suicides)
- Farmers/Cultivators: 4,690 (≈43%)
- Agricultural labourers: 6,096 (≈57%)
- Gender breakdown:
- Farmers: 4,553 male, 137 female
- Agricultural workers: 5,433 male, 663 female
- State-wise burden:
- Maharashtra: 38.5% (highest)
- Karnataka: 22.5%
- Andhra Pradesh: 8.6%
- Madhya Pradesh: 7.2%
- Tamil Nadu: 5.9%
- States like Bihar, West Bengal, Odisha, Jharkhand, Himachal, North-East (except Assam) → reported zero farm suicides.
Relevance
- GS Paper 1 (Society): Agrarian distress, social consequences of suicides.
- GS Paper 2 (Governance, Welfare): Policy gaps in MSP, credit, trade, welfare schemes.
- GS Paper 3 (Economy, Agriculture): Farm economics, cotton crisis, climate change impacts.

Historical Trends & Continuity
- Farmer suicides have been a persistent crisis since the mid-1990s (post-liberalisation period).
- NCRB data shows >10,000 farm suicides annually in 2021, 2022, 2023.
- Concentration in cotton and soybean belts → Vidarbha, Marathwada (Maharashtra), northern Karnataka, Telangana, parts of Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh.
- Pattern reflects a regional agrarian distress, not uniformly spread across India.
Underlying Causes of Farmer Suicides
- Economic Distress:
- High input costs (seeds, fertilisers, pesticides, energy).
- Low and unstable output prices (esp. cotton, soybean).
- Indebtedness to private moneylenders and microfinance agencies.
- Policy-Linked Issues:
- MSP coverage inadequate, procurement limited to rice/wheat → non-MSP crops vulnerable.
- Waiver of cotton import duty (11%) seen as worsening distress by making Indian cotton less competitive.
- Trade treaties (FTAs, tariff reductions) viewed as threats to domestic farmers.
- Environmental Stress:
- Rainfall variability, drought-prone regions like Marathwada.
- Climate change intensifies crop failure risk.
- Social Factors:
- Debt traps, family obligations, lack of social safety nets.
- Limited mental health outreach in rural areas.
- Labour Vulnerability:
- Agricultural workers face irregular wages, seasonal unemployment, no land ownership, and weaker bargaining power.
Structural Dimensions
- Cotton Crisis:
- Bt cotton adoption raised costs (seeds, pesticide dependence).
- Global cotton price fluctuations hurt smallholders.
- Soybean Belts:
- Price volatility in global edible oil markets.
- Competition from cheaper imports.
- Dual Crisis:
- Cultivators trapped by debt + labourers trapped in underemployment.
- State-specific variations:
- Maharashtra = “epicentre” → Vidarbha/Marathwada termed “farmer graveyards”.
- Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh face similar rainfed agriculture risks.
Political-Economic Criticism
- Farmer unions (AIKS, others) argue:
- Union govt. “failed to grasp systemic agrarian crisis”.
- Policies like import duty cuts on cotton benefit foreign producers (esp. U.S.) while harming Indian farmers.
- Trade liberalisation (FTAs) → “tariff terrorism” → domestic farm sector undermined.
- NCRB data itself questioned by farmer leaders (argue undercounting, non-inclusion of landless workers, exclusion of attempted suicides).
Possible Solutions & Way Forward
- Policy & Economic Measures:
- Expand MSP coverage to non-rice/wheat crops (esp. cotton, soybean, pulses).
- Strengthen procurement in distress-hit regions.
- Crop insurance (PMFBY) → needs better implementation and faster claim settlement.
- Regulate input costs (Bt seeds, fertiliser subsidies).
- Debt Relief & Credit Reform:
- Address dependency on private moneylenders.
- Strengthen rural cooperative credit and Kisan Credit Card outreach.
- Structural Diversification:
- Encourage crop diversification, allied activities (livestock, dairy, horticulture).
- Promote value-addition and agro-processing to buffer market shocks.
- Social & Mental Health Support:
- Tele-MANAS (14416) helpline is a start → but rural mental health infrastructure must expand.
- Community-based counselling and awareness campaigns needed.
- Long-Term Measures:
- Rural employment schemes (MGNREGA, PM-KUSUM) to reduce sole dependence on crop income.
- Resilient agriculture via water management, climate-resilient seeds, watershed development.
Cost of convenience: health hazards as a side effect of using digital tools
Basics
- Why in News: India generated 2.2 million tonnes of e-waste in 2025, with informal recycling hubs causing severe health and environmental hazards.
- Definition:
- E-waste = discarded electronic products (mobiles, laptops, TVs, circuit boards, batteries, cables, etc.).
- It is the fastest-growing solid waste stream globally.
- India’s Position (2025):
- Generated 2.2 million tonnes of e-waste (3rd largest after China & USA).
- Growth of 150% since 2017–18 (0.71 MT).
- At current pace, volumes may double by 2030.
Relevance
- GS3 (Environment & Health): Pollution, Waste management, Urban sustainability.
- GS2 (Governance & Policy): Implementation challenges of E-waste Rules, federal role in regulation.

Current Status in India
- Geography:
- Urban epicentres → 60% of e-waste from 65 cities.
- Hotspots: Seelampur & Mustafabad (Delhi), Moradabad (UP), Bhiwandi (Maharashtra).
- Recycling ecosystem:
- 322 formal recycling units with 2.2 MT capacity exist.
- But >50% e-waste is handled informally by kabadiwalas, scrap dealers, and home-based workshops.
- Methods used informally: manual dismantling, acid leaching, open burning, unsafe dumping.
- Toxins released:
- Heavy metals → lead, cadmium, mercury, chromium.
- POPs → dioxins, furans, brominated flame retardants.
- PM2.5/PM10 from burning wires.
- Air quality impact:
- Seelampur’s PM2.5 > 300 μg/m³, ~12× WHO safe limit (25 μg/m³).
Health Hazards
- Respiratory illnesses
- Inhalation of fine particles → chronic bronchitis, asthma, wheezing, chest tightness.
- 2025 Indian study: 76–80% informal workers showed chronic respiratory symptoms.
- Neurological & Developmental damage
- Lead & mercury exposure → cognitive decline, reduced IQ, behavioral issues, endocrine disruption.
- Children at highest risk → exposure via soil, dust, contaminated water.
- WHO: millions of children globally exposed to unsafe lead due to e-waste.
- Skin & Eye Disorders
- Direct handling of CRTs, acids, metals → rashes, burns, dermatitis, eye irritation.
- Some clusters report up to 100% prevalence of skin problems among recyclers.
- Reproductive & Genetic impacts
- Increased miscarriages & preterm births in contaminated areas.
- DNA damage, oxidative stress, immune system alterations in children.
- Syndemic effects
- Health impacts worsen when combined with poverty, malnutrition, unsafe housing, lack of healthcare.
- Creates overlapping disease burden among urban poor.
Policy Framework
- E-Waste Management Rules, 2022:
- Strengthened Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR).
- Mandatory registration of dismantlers/recyclers.
- Incentives for formal recycling.
- Gaps:
- Weak enforcement → only 43% of e-waste formally processed (2023–24).
- Informal sector dominates.
- EPR credit price caps → legal disputes with manufacturers.
Global Context
- China (Guiyu): major informal hub with severe pollution & child health crises.
- West Africa (Benin, Ghana): high respiratory illnesses among informal workers.
- US & EU: focus on advanced recycling tech + export bans on e-waste to developing countries.
Way Forward
- Formalisation of informal sector
- Integrate kabadiwalas → skill training, PPE, social security.
- Provide safe infrastructure & access to healthcare.
- Regulatory Strengthening
- Empower Pollution Control Boards.
- Digital tracking of e-waste.
- Mandatory audits & penalties for non-compliance.
- Health Interventions
- Medical surveillance, regular camps in hotspots.
- Long-term studies on children’s health.
- Technology & Innovation
- Invest in low-cost, decentralised recycling technologies.
- R&D for eco-friendly dismantling methods.
- Public Awareness & Education
- School-level inclusion of e-waste education.
- Mass campaigns to encourage responsible disposal.
How to safeguard India’s digital economy ?
Basics
- Why in News: Rising cybercrime targeting UPI, digital banking, and e-commerce, exposing weaknesses in institutional preparedness and consumer protection.
- India’s digital leap: Driven by affordable internet, UPI-based digital banking, e-commerce, and digital governance.
- Impact: Enhanced inclusion, convenience, and growth in financial and social services.
- Problem: Parallel rise of cybercrime, exploiting system loopholes and human psychology.
Relevance
- GS2 (Governance, Security): Institutional capacity, citizen trust, regulatory reforms.
- GS3 (Science & Tech, Internal Security): Cybercrime, AI/ML applications in governance.

Nature of Cybercrime in India
- Techniques used:
- Phishing (fake links/emails to steal data).
- OTP/UPI frauds (victims unknowingly authorise transfers).
- Loan scams & job scams (targeting vulnerable groups).
- Identity theft (misuse of Aadhaar, PAN, bank details).
- Remote access scams (malicious apps give criminals control of devices).
- Digital arrests (impersonation of police/customs, fake warrants, psychological coercion).
- Key Feature: Relies less on hacking skills, more on social engineering (fear, urgency, trust, greed).
Vulnerable Groups
- Elderly → often digitally illiterate but with savings.
- Rural populations → low awareness, weak cyber literacy.
- Job seekers & loan applicants → easily lured by fake offers.
- Even educated urban users → break down under psychological pressure.
Case Illustrations
- Retired banker (78 yrs): lost ₹23 crore across 21 transactions.
- Lawmaker’s wife: lost ₹14 lakh but recovered due to swift action.
- Lesson: Delay = irreversible loss, Swift reporting = possible recovery.
Institutional Gaps
- Banks:
- Limit themselves to advisories.
- Weak KYC → mule accounts thrive.
- Fail to detect unusual patterns (multi-crore debits unchecked).
- Customer data leaks widely.
- Cyber police:
- Understaffed, under-skilled, under-equipped.
- Poor use of the 24-hour golden window.
- Victims trapped in delays → criminals escape.
- Systemic apathy: Thousands of daily cases; many unreported due to stigma & lack of trust.
Evolving Nature of Fraud
- Earlier → ATM skimming, small-scale theft.
- Now → organised, large-scale, tech-enabled, cross-border.
- Fraud patterns:
- Abnormally large transfers vs normal profile.
- Multiple high-value debits in short intervals.
- Sudden inflows into dormant/fake KYC accounts (mule accounts).
- Quick layering → money dispersed across small banks, recovery blocked.
Possible Interventions
- AI/ML-based monitoring:
- Personalised transaction profiles → detect deviations.
- Anomaly detection for mule accounts & abnormal activity.
- Temporary holds on suspicious transactions.
- Cross-institutional cooperation:
- Real-time fraud intelligence sharing between banks, telecoms, and cyber police.
- Immediate alerts across the financial ecosystem.
- Empowering Cyber Police:
- AI-driven real-time detection tools.
- 24×7 response teams within the golden 24-hour window.
- Global data-sharing & cross-border cooperation.
- Strengthening Banks:
- Plug KYC loopholes.
- Blockchain for secure data & tamper-proof records.
- Proactive, not advisory-only, approach.
The Way Forward
- Shift from reactive complaint-handling → proactive prevention.
- Adopt protection-first framework: citizen safety & digital trust as foundation of financial stability.
- Swift compensation to victims (RBI mandate) → restore trust.
- Tech solutions (AI, ML, Blockchain) exist → what is missing is institutional will & accountability.
Accidental Deaths & Natural Hazards
Basics
- Why in News: NCRB 2023 report highlights deaths from natural causes (lightning, heat stroke, floods), showing rising vulnerability due to climate change.
- Source: NCRB’s 2023 report on Accidental Deaths and Suicides in India.
- Deaths due to forces of nature: 6,444.
- Major natural causes:
- Lightning strikes → 2,560 deaths (39.7%).
- Heat stroke → 804 deaths (12.5%).
- Floods, cold exposure, landslides, torrential rains → remaining share.
Relevance
- GS1 (Geography) → Natural disasters, climate patterns (lightning, floods, heatwaves).
- GS2 (Governance, Welfare) → Public health preparedness, NDMA role, inter-state coordination.
- GS3 (Disaster Management, Environment) → Impact of climate change on mortality.
Other Key Fatalities (2023)
- Snake bites: 10,144 deaths (major killer among natural/animal causes).
- Animal attacks: 1,739 deaths (1,172 due to animal attacks, 567 due to snakebite misclassification within this category).
- Insect/other bites: Also included in natural causes fatalities.
Regional Distribution
- States with highest deaths due to forces of nature:
- Madhya Pradesh – 397 deaths.
- Bihar – 345.
- Odisha – 294.
- Uttar Pradesh – 287.
- Jharkhand – 194.
- Specific observations:
- Odisha → 1,351 deaths from lightning alone (highest for one state).
- Telangana → 82% of natural deaths due to heat stroke.
- Himachal, Mizoram, Arunachal, Meghalaya → highest proportion of landslide-related deaths.
Demographic Insights
- Age group most affected:
- 30–45 years → 34.8%.
- 45–60 years → 28.8%.
- Cause-specific:
- Lightning victims → 63.6% of total natural deaths.
- Heat stroke → highest concentration in Telangana.
Urban–Rural Patterns
- Urban centres:
- Amritsar → highest overall exposure-related deaths (211 total; 196 due to heat).
- Other high-burden cities → Ludhiana (50), Dhanbad (11).
- Rural areas: disproportionately affected due to dependence on agriculture and outdoor work.
Comparisons & Trends
- Snake bites (10,144) kill far more than all “forces of nature” combined (6,444).
- Lightning deaths remain the single largest killer in the “natural forces” category.
- Heatwave deaths are rising with climate change, especially in central and southern India.
- NCRB notes under-reporting in states with weaker health and disaster surveillance.
Policy & Governance Implications
- Disaster Preparedness:
- Strengthen heatwave action plans (early warnings, public cooling shelters).
- Lightning protection measures (lightning arresters, awareness campaigns for farmers and outdoor workers).
- Snakebite management → stock antidotes, rural health infrastructure.
- Urban planning: Heat island mitigation (green cover, water bodies).
- Rural safety: Training for farmers, construction workers, outdoor labour.
Snow Leopard Survey in Himachal Pradesh
Basics
- Why in News: Latest survey (2024) shows snow leopard population in Himachal Pradesh increased from 51 to 83, reflecting conservation success.
- Species: Snow Leopard (Panthera uncia), apex predator, “indicator species” for high-altitude ecosystems.
- Location: Himachal Pradesh’s high-altitude habitats (Spiti, Kinnaur, Lahaul, Greater Himalayan & Pin Valley National Parks).
- Survey Findings:
- Population increased from 51 (2021) → 83 (2024) (excluding cubs).
- First comprehensive survey (2018–2021) → second survey completed in 2024.
Relevance
- GS1 (Geography) → Himalayan ecosystems & biodiversity.
- GS2 (Governance) → Role of state in conservation, cooperative federalism in wildlife management.
- GS3 (Environment) → Wildlife conservation, climate change impact on fragile ecosystems.

Survey Methodology
- Conducted by Himachal Forest Department + Nature Conservation Foundation (NCF).
- Techniques Used:
- 271 camera traps set up across 26,000 sq. km habitat.
- Use of spatially explicit capture-recapture methods.
- Identified 44 unique individuals from 262 confirmed detections.
- Coordinated field efforts ensured reliable results → addresses criticism of past underestimation.
Regional Distribution
- Highest Density: Spiti Valley (core snow leopard landscape).
- Other strongholds:
- Kinnaur, Lahaul, Greater Himalayan NP, Pin Valley NP.
- Additional detections in Kibber Wildlife Sanctuary, Chandratal Sanctuary, Tundah Sanctuary, Kugti Sanctuary, Sechut Sanctuary, Asrang Wildlife Sanctuary.
- District-level: Upper Kinnaur & Tabo reported highest concentrations.
Population Insights
- Estimated range: 67–103 individuals (with 83 as mean estimate).
- Density: 0.16 to 0.53 snow leopards per 100 sq. km, comparable with global snow leopard densities in Central Asia.
- Encouraging trend → indicates stable and possibly recovering population.
Conservation Significance
- Himachal Pradesh → first state in India to complete a scientific snow leopard population estimate.
- Snow leopard = umbrella species → conservation ensures survival of associated high-altitude biodiversity.
- Linked with India’s SECURE Himalaya Project (UNDP + MoEFCC + GEF).
- Survey strengthens India’s international commitments under the Global Snow Leopard and Ecosystem Protection Program (GSLEP, 2013).
Challenges Highlighted
- Habitat fragility: Infrastructure projects (roads, dams, tourism).
- Human-wildlife conflict: Attacks on livestock → retaliatory killings.
- Climate change: Shrinking snowline alters prey base (Bharal, ibex).
- Poaching & illegal wildlife trade: Although reduced, remains a threat.
Policy & Governance Implications
- Wildlife Week 2024 highlight → scientific conservation success.
- Supports India’s efforts to align biodiversity conservation with SDG 15 (Life on Land).
- Need for:
- Expansion of community-based conservation (eco-tourism, compensation for livestock losses).
- Strengthened monitoring & technology use (drones, AI for camera trap analysis).
- Cross-border collaboration (snow leopards span India–China–Nepal–Bhutan–Pakistan).
Value Addition
- Scientific Name: Panthera uncia (formerly Uncia uncia), apex predator of the Himalayas.
- IUCN Status: Vulnerable (IUCN Red List, 2023), population declining globally due to habitat loss and poaching.
- Global Range: High-altitude regions of 12 countries – India, Nepal, Bhutan, China, Mongolia, Russia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.
- Indian Distribution: Found in five states – Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, and Arunachal Pradesh.
- Habitat Preference: Alpine and subalpine zones (3,000–5,500 m), rocky cliffs, and steep terrain with sparse vegetation.
- Diet: Carnivore; preys on bharal (blue sheep), ibex, marmots, pikas, domestic livestock (in conflict zones).
- Adaptations: Thick fur, wide paws for snow traction, long tail for balance and warmth, camouflaged coat for rocky terrain.
- Reproduction: Breeding season Feb–Mar, gestation ~90–100 days, litter size 1–5 cubs; cubs remain with mother ~18–22 months.
- Threats: Poaching (for fur and bones), retaliatory killings due to livestock predation, climate change shrinking alpine habitat, mining/road construction.
- Conservation Efforts:Project Snow Leopard (MoEFCC, India) – community-based conservation.Global Snow Leopard & Ecosystem Protection Program (GSLEP, 2013) – 12 range countries collaborate.Protected areas: Hemis NP (J&K), Khangchendzonga NP (Sikkim), Pin Valley NP (HP), Great Himalayan NP (HP).