Biodiversity Hotspots in India & Hope Spots – UPSC Notes

Biodiversity Hotspots in India & Hope Spots | UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS

📗 UPSC CSE 2026 · GS Paper III · Environment & Ecology · Legacy IAS, Bangalore

Legacy IAS · Bangalore

Biodiversity Hotspots in India
& Hope Spots

India has 4 of the world’s 36 biodiversity hotspots — each a unique story of extraordinary life under extraordinary threat. Plus Hope Spots — the ocean’s last refuges. With UPSC traps, PYQs and current affairs.

UPSC PrelimsGS Paper III 4 India HotspotsNorman Myers Hope SpotsMission Blue Current Affairs 2024–25
The Big Idea
What Is a Biodiversity Hotspot?

Not just “a place with lots of species.” A very specific, scientifically defined concept with two strict criteria.

Imagine you have ₹1,000 to protect biodiversity and 100 areas need protection. You can’t protect all of them. Where do you spend the money for maximum impact? That is exactly the question that led to the Hotspot concept.

Norman Myers, a British environmentalist and scientist, coined the term “biodiversity hotspot” in a 1988 paper in the journal The Environmentalist. He identified 10 initial hotspots. Conservation International (CI) adopted and expanded the concept, and it is now CI’s primary conservation tool for directing funds and effort.

★ Key People & Organisations
  • Norman Myers — coined “biodiversity hotspot” (1988) ★
  • Conservation International (CI) — manages the hotspot concept globally; maintains the official list ★
  • Currently 36 globally recognised biodiversity hotspots ★ (some sources say 34 or 35 — UPSC uses 36)
  • Together, hotspots cover only ~2.5% of Earth’s land surface but contain over 50% of all endemic plant species and ~43% of endemic vertebrates
The Two Tests ★
Criteria for a Biodiversity Hotspot

Both criteria MUST be met simultaneously. Miss either one — not a hotspot. This is the most-tested UPSC fact on this topic.

1
High Endemism — Plants
RICHNESS criterion
≥ 1,500
endemic vascular plant species (≥0.5% of world’s 300,000 species)

The area must have at least 1,500 species of vascular plants found nowhere else on Earth. This measures how unique (not just how many) the plant life is. Vascular plants are the foundation of terrestrial ecosystems — they determine what animals can live there.

Why plants specifically? Plants are easier to count, more thoroughly documented, and serve as a reliable proxy for overall biodiversity richness.

2
High Threat — Habitat Lost
THREAT criterion
≥ 70%
of original primary vegetation already lost

The area must have lost at least 70% of its original natural habitat due to human activity. This measures how threatened the remaining biodiversity is. Only 30% or less of the original natural habitat remains.

This is the urgency criterion — it explains why hotspots need priority attention. A pristine forest with high endemism but no threat is NOT a hotspot. Both richness AND threat are required.

⚠ UPSC Trap — The Exact Numbers
  • Criterion 1: ≥ 1,500 endemic vascular plants (NOT 500, NOT 1,000, NOT 2,000) ★
  • Criterion 2: ≥ 70% habitat lost (meaning ≤30% original vegetation remains) — some older sources say 75%. UPSC uses 70%. ★
  • BOTH criteria must be satisfied — a very biodiverse but unthreatened area is NOT a hotspot ★
  • Hotspots are primarily a terrestrial concept — for marine areas, Mission Blue designates “Hope Spots” instead ★
  • Hotspots are NOT declared by IUCN — they are identified by Conservation International ★ (common UPSC trap)
India’s Conservation Priority
India’s 4 Biodiversity Hotspots

India covers only 2.4% of Earth’s land but hosts 4 of 36 global hotspots — an extraordinary concentration of threatened biodiversity.

Hotspot 01
Western Ghats + Sri Lanka
Western coast of India · Sahyadri Hills
Hotspot 02
Himalaya
Entire Himalayan arc · Bhutan, Nepal, NE India
Hotspot 03
Indo-Burma
NE India (excl. Assam) · Myanmar · SE Asia
Hotspot 04
Sundaland
Nicobar Islands · Indonesia · Malaysia
💡 Easy Memory — W-H-I-S

Western Ghats · Himalayas · Indo-Burma · Sundaland → Wild Habitats In South”. Note: The Andaman Islands (part of Indo-Burma hotspot) and Nicobar Islands (part of Sundaland hotspot) are sometimes confused. Andaman = Indo-Burma; Nicobar = Sundaland. ★

India’s 4 Biodiversity Hotspots — Deep Coverage
Each Hotspot Explained

Two criteria met, countless lives at stake. Click any card to learn more about each hotspot.

🌿 Hotspot 01 · Western Ghats + Sri Lanka
Western Ghats
1,600 km along India’s west coast · 6 states · UNESCO World Heritage Site 2012

Ancient Gondwana-era mountains that acted as a refugium for millions of years — home to species found nowhere else. The Ghats intercept the SW monsoon, receiving 2,000–6,000mm rainfall. Origin of 3 major peninsular rivers: Godavari, Krishna, Cauvery.

UNESCO recognition (2012): 39 sites across 6 states declared World Heritage for “Outstanding Universal Value.” India’s first biosphere reserve — Nilgiri BR (1986) — lies here. Contains ~27% of India’s total flora in just ~5% of land area. ★

Unique fact: The Purple frog (Nasikabatrachus sahyadrensis) — discovered in 2003 — represents an 800-million-year-old lineage, related to frogs in the Seychelles. Lives underground 11 months a year, emerging only for monsoon mating. ★

Lion-tailed macaque ★ Nilgiri tahr ★ Purple frog (2003) ★ King cobra Malabar giant squirrel Nilgiri langur
Threats: Tea/coffee/rubber plantations · Mining · Highways across Ghats · Invasive Lantana & Parthenium · Sand mining in rivers
🏔️ Hotspot 02 · Himalaya (separated from Indo-Burma in 2004 ★)
Himalaya Hotspot
Entire Himalayan arc · India, Nepal, Bhutan, Pakistan, Tibet, Myanmar · ~750,000 km²

The Himalayas are biodiverse because of vertical zonation — climbing from Terai (100m) to permanent snow (5,000m+) means passing through tropical, temperate, coniferous, alpine, and tundra zones in one mountain range. Each zone = a different set of species.

Biogeographical crossroads ★: Where the Palearctic realm (Central Asian: snow leopard, Tibetan antelope) meets the Oriental realm (South Asian: tigers, elephants in Terai). This overlap of two faunal realms explains the extraordinary diversity despite cold temperatures.

2004 reclassification ★: Originally part of Indo-Burma hotspot. Conservation International separated it in 2004 as the standalone “Himalaya” hotspot. India’s total count stayed at 4.

Snow leopard ★ Red panda ★ Tibetan antelope (Chiru) Himalayan tahr One-horned rhino (Terai) Monal pheasant
Threats: Glacial retreat from climate change · Dams & highways · Tourism pressure · Jhum with short fallow cycles · Poaching for wildlife trade
🌏 Hotspot 03 · Indo-Burma (NE India excl. Assam + Andaman ★)
Indo-Burma Hotspot
NE India (excl. Assam) + Andaman Islands · Myanmar · Vietnam · Cambodia · ~2 million km²

India’s share ★: Includes Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, Meghalaya, Tripura, Sikkim — and the Andaman Islands (NOT Nicobar, which is Sundaland). This distinction is a direct UPSC trap.

A transition zone between South Asia and SE Asia — species from both realms overlap. Highest freshwater turtle diversity of any hotspot globally. Six new large mammal species discovered here in just the past 12 years — showing how poorly explored it remains.

India’s only ape ★: The Hoolock Gibbon is found only in NE India’s forests within this hotspot. Also home to the Golden Langur — found only along the Assam-Bhutan border region.

Hoolock gibbon (India’s only ape) ★ Golden langur ★ Great hornbill Clouded leopard Blyth’s tragopan Mahseer fish
Threats: Illegal logging & wildlife trade · Jhum with short fallow cycles · Large dams (Dibang, Tipaimukh) · Road construction · Freshwater turtle overexploitation
🏝️ Hotspot 04 · Sundaland (India = Nicobar Islands ONLY ★)
Sundaland Hotspot
Nicobar Islands (India) · Indonesia · Malaysia · Singapore · Philippines · ~1.6 million km²

India’s contribution = Nicobar Islands only ★ — NOT the Andaman Islands (those are Indo-Burma). The Nicobars are biogeographically closer to Indonesia/SE Asia, which explains the boundary. Despite covering only 0.25% of India’s land, the Nicobars harbour over 10% of India’s fauna species due to extreme island endemism.

Current affairs 2024–25 ★: The Great Nicobar Development Project (transshipment port, airport, township on Great Nicobar Island) has triggered major controversy — threatening leatherback turtle nesting beaches, the Shompen tribal reserve, and endemic species like Nicobar megapode.

Global picture: Borneo and Sumatra (bulk of this hotspot) are the last strongholds for orangutans, Sumatran tigers, and pygmy elephants — facing the world’s fastest ongoing deforestation for oil palm plantations.

Nicobar megapode ★ Giant robber crab ★ Leatherback turtle ★ Nicobar treeshrew Saltwater crocodile Island fruit bat
Threats (India): Great Nicobar dev. project · Sea level rise · Invasive species · Unsustainable tourism. (Global): Oil palm deforestation in Borneo/Sumatra
Master Reference
All 4 Hotspots — Comparison Table
HotspotIndia’s ShareKey EcosystemsFlagship Species (India) ★Major ThreatUPSC-Critical Facts
Western Ghats + Sri Lanka Entire W. Ghats (6 states) + Kerala sholas Tropical rainforest, shola grasslands, moist deciduous Lion-tailed macaque, Nilgiri tahr, Purple frog (2003) ★ Plantations, mining, infrastructure UNESCO WHS 2012 ★; Ancient Gondwana lineages; Nilgiri BR (India’s 1st, 1986) ★
Himalaya All Indian Himalayan states Terai grasslands → alpine → tundra (vertical zonation) Snow leopard, red panda, Himalayan tahr ★ Climate change, glacial retreat, development Separated from Indo-Burma in 2004 ★; Confluence of Palearctic + Oriental realms ★; Explains why Himalayas are biodiverse despite altitude
Indo-Burma NE India (excl. Assam) + Andaman Islands ★ Tropical evergreen, moist deciduous, freshwater systems Hoolock gibbon (India’s only ape) ★, golden langur, great hornbill Illegal logging, wildlife trade, jhum Andaman = Indo-Burma (NOT Nicobar!) ★; Highest freshwater turtle diversity; 6 new mammal species found recently
Sundaland Nicobar Islands ONLY ★ (not Andaman) Rainforest, coral reefs, mangroves Nicobar megapode, giant robber crab, leatherback turtle ★ Sea level rise, oil palm (globally), tourism Nicobar = Sundaland ★; 0.25% of India’s land = >10% of fauna; Globally: orangutan, Sumatran tiger habitat under threat
⚠ The Biggest UPSC Trap — Andaman vs Nicobar
  • Andaman Islands → part of Indo-Burma hotspot ★
  • Nicobar Islands → part of Sundaland hotspot ★
  • They are part of the SAME union territory (Andaman & Nicobar Islands) but belong to DIFFERENT biodiversity hotspots
  • UPSC asks: “India’s share in Sundaland” — answer is Nicobar Islands (NOT Andaman)
  • Also trap: “India has four biodiversity hotspots — Eastern Himalayas, Western Himalayas, Western Ghats, and Andaman & Nicobar Islands” → WRONG ★ (Western Himalayas is NOT a separate hotspot; the hotspot is simply “Himalaya”)
★ Current Affairs Update — Hotspots 2024–25
  • Western Ghats Eco-Sensitive Zones: The Supreme Court-mandated Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (Kasturirangan Committee) recommendations on Eco-Sensitive Zones continue to be a contested policy issue. ESZ notifications under Environmental Protection Act regulate development in the buffer areas of hotspot forests. States of Kerala, Karnataka, and Goa have raised objections to the extent of ESZ coverage (affecting farmland).
  • Project Cheetah and Hotspot: India’s reintroduced Kuno National Park (MP) is in the Indo-Gangetic Plain — NOT within a hotspot. The native range of Asiatic cheetah was the dry grasslands and semi-arid zones of peninsular India — also not in the four hotspots.
  • COP16 (Cali, Colombia, 2024): Conference of Parties to CBD (Convention on Biological Diversity) — target of 30×30 (protect 30% of Earth’s land and oceans by 2030) will significantly affect all biodiversity hotspots, including India’s four. India committed to expanding its protected area network.
  • IPBES Global Assessment 2019: Confirmed that all four of India’s hotspots are under accelerating threat — habitat loss is driving species extinction 1,000× natural background rate. The assessment emphasised that protecting hotspots should be the world’s top conservation priority.
  • Nicobar Islands Development Project: Ongoing debate (2023–25) over large-scale development in Great Nicobar Island (transshipment port, military base, township) — which is part of the Sundaland hotspot. Environmental Impact Assessment has raised concerns about impact on leatherback turtle nesting beaches, coral reefs, and the unique Nicobar endemic species. Ongoing controversy relevant to UPSC current affairs.
Marine Conservation ★
Hope Spots — The Ocean’s Hotspots
Mission Blue · Dr. Sylvia Earle · Ocean Conservation
🌊 Hope Spots
Special places in the ocean that are critical to health of the ocean and require urgent protection — the marine equivalent of biodiversity hotspots

Hope Spots are ocean areas identified as critical to the health of the sea — places with significant marine biodiversity, important ecological functions, or exceptional potential for recovery if protected. The concept was introduced by Dr. Sylvia Earle, legendary oceanographer (National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence, former Chief Scientist of NOAA) and founder/Chairman of Mission Blue.

Biodiversity Hotspots (Land)
  • Terrestrial ecosystems only
  • Identified by Conservation International
  • Based on: endemic plant species + habitat loss
  • 36 hotspots globally
  • Coined by Norman Myers (1988) ★
Hope Spots (Ocean)
  • Marine (ocean) ecosystems only
  • Identified by Mission Blue (not IUCN) ★
  • Based on: ecological importance + protection urgency
  • 100+ hope spots globally
  • Concept by Dr. Sylvia Earle

Why are Hope Spots needed? Only about 1% of the world’s oceans are effectively protected — compared to ~12% of land. The ocean covers 71% of Earth’s surface but most of it is a conservation vacuum. Hope Spots are a way to draw international attention and resources to the most critical marine areas — even if they don’t yet have legal protected status.

🪸
Lakshadweep Islands
Declared Hope Spot — 2013 · Arabian Sea

The Lakshadweep Islands (36 islands, 12 coral atolls) are one of the most important coral reef systems in the Indian Ocean. Their pristine coral reefs support extraordinary marine biodiversity including reef fish, sea turtles, manta rays, and whale sharks.

Conservation concern: Coral bleaching events (caused by warming Arabian Sea) are damaging the reefs. Only Pitti Island (0.01 km²) has a formal Marine Protected Area (MPA) designation — the rest of the coral reef system remains legally unprotected. ★

Coral atolls Whale shark Manta rays Pitti = only MPA ★
🐠
Andaman & Nicobar Islands
Declared Hope Spot — 2013 · Bay of Bengal

The Andaman & Nicobar Islands have the most extensive and best-preserved coral reef system in India. Over 105 marine protected areas cover more than 30% of the terrestrial area and 40% of coastal habitats.

Outstanding marine biodiversity: 572 coral species (more than Caribbean’s total), 1,200+ fish species, leatherback sea turtles nesting on beaches (largest sea turtle), dugongs in seagrass beds, Irrawaddy dolphins in creeks. ★

572 coral species Leatherback turtle ★ Dugong 105 MPAs ★
⚠ UPSC Trap — Hope Spots
  • Hope Spots are declared by Mission Blue (Dr. Sylvia Earle’s organization) — NOT by IUCN
  • Some sources say IUCN and Mission Blue jointly — but the primary organisation is Mission Blue ★
  • Hope Spots = marine/ocean — NOT terrestrial ★
  • India’s Hope Spots: Lakshadweep + Andaman & Nicobar Islands (both declared 2013) ★
  • Only ~1% of oceans are protected — Hope Spots advocate for more marine protection ★
  • Hope Spots are NOT legally binding protected areas — they are designations that raise awareness and advocacy
Practice Questions
MCQ Practice Set
MCQ 01 · Easy — Hotspot Criteria ★
To qualify as a biodiversity hotspot, a region must satisfy which of the following criteria?
1. It must have at least 1,500 species of endemic vascular plants
2. It must have lost at least 70% of its original primary vegetation
3. It must be located in a tropical region
4. It must be designated by IUCN
a) 1 and 4 only
b) 1, 2 and 3 only
c) 1 and 2 only
d) 2, 3 and 4 only
Answer: (c) 1 and 2 only

Statement 1: CORRECT ★ — The richness criterion: ≥1,500 endemic vascular plant species (0.5% of world’s total). Statement 2: CORRECT ★ — The threat criterion: ≥70% of original primary vegetation already lost (≤30% remaining). Statement 3: WRONG ★ — Hotspots are NOT restricted to tropical regions. Mediterranean Basin, California Floristic Province, Southwest Australia are all non-tropical hotspots. Statement 4: WRONG ★ — Hotspots are designated by Conservation International (CI), NOT by IUCN. This is the most common UPSC trap on this topic. IUCN manages the Red List and protected area categories — not biodiversity hotspots.
UPSC Prelims — Direct Pattern
MCQ 02 · Hard — India’s 4 Hotspots ★
Consider the following statements about India’s biodiversity hotspots:
1. India has four biodiversity hotspots — Eastern Himalayas, Western Himalayas, Western Ghats, and Andaman & Nicobar Islands
2. The Andaman Islands are part of the Indo-Burma hotspot
3. The Nicobar Islands are part of the Sundaland hotspot
4. The Himalaya hotspot was separated from the Indo-Burma hotspot in 2004
Which of the statements given above are correct?
a) 1, 2 and 3 only
b) 1 and 4 only
c) 2, 3 and 4 only
d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Answer: (c) 2, 3 and 4 only

Statement 1: WRONG ★ — This is the classic UPSC trap! India’s four hotspots are: (1) Western Ghats + Sri Lanka, (2) Himalaya, (3) Indo-Burma, (4) Sundaland. “Eastern Himalayas” and “Western Himalayas” are NOT separate hotspots — there is ONE Himalaya hotspot. And A&N Islands are NOT a separate hotspot — Andaman = Indo-Burma, Nicobar = Sundaland. Statement 2: CORRECT ★ — Andaman Islands are part of Indo-Burma hotspot (NOT Nicobar). Statement 3: CORRECT ★ — Nicobar Islands = India’s contribution to Sundaland hotspot. Statement 4: CORRECT ★ — Until 2004, the Himalayan region was considered part of the Indo-Burma hotspot. In 2004, Conservation International reappraised hotspots and designated the Himalayan arc as a separate hotspot — the “Himalaya” hotspot. This did not change the total number of India’s hotspots (still 4).
MCQ 03 · Medium — Hope Spots ★
With reference to “Hope Spots”, which of the following statements are correct?
1. These are earth’s biologically richest and most endangered terrestrial eco-regions
2. These are declared by IUCN
3. Lakshadweep and Andaman & Nicobar Islands are included in India’s Hope Spots
a) 1 only
b) 1 and 2 only
c) 1 and 3 only
d) 3 only
Answer: (d) 3 only — Direct UPSC-pattern question.

Statement 1: WRONG ★ — “Earth’s biologically richest and most endangered terrestrial eco-regions” describes Biodiversity Hotspots — not Hope Spots. Hope Spots are MARINE (ocean) areas critical to ocean health. Completely different concept. Statement 2: WRONG ★ — Hope Spots are declared by Mission Blue (Dr. Sylvia Earle’s organisation), NOT IUCN. IUCN is frequently mis-attributed in questions on Hope Spots — this is a deliberate UPSC trap. Statement 3: CORRECT ★ — Both Lakshadweep Islands and Andaman & Nicobar Islands were named Hope Spots in 2013 by Mission Blue — becoming the first Indian locations on the global list of 50 Hope Spots. India’s Hope Spots = two island groups, both declared 2013.
MCQ 04 · Easy — Norman Myers
The concept of “Biodiversity Hotspots” was introduced by:
a) Edward O. Wilson
b) Norman Myers
c) Sylvia Earle
d) Paul Ehrlich
Answer: (b) Norman Myers — directly UPSC-testable.

Norman Myers, a British environmentalist, coined the term “biodiversity hotspot” in a 1988 paper. He initially identified 10 hotspots. Conservation International (CI) adopted and expanded the concept — now 36 hotspots globally. Don’t confuse: Edward O. Wilson coined “biodiversity” and championed conservation biology broadly. Sylvia Earle introduced “Hope Spots” for oceans. Paul Ehrlich wrote “The Population Bomb” but is not associated with hotspots specifically.
MCQ 05 · Hard — Western Ghats ★
Three of the following criteria have contributed to the recognition of Western Ghats-Sri Lanka and Indo-Burma regions as hotspots of biodiversity:
1. Species richness
2. Vegetation density
3. Endemism
4. Ethno-botanical importance
5. Threat perception
6. Adaptation of flora and fauna to warm and humid conditions
Which three criteria are correct?
a) 1, 2 and 6
b) 1, 3 and 5
c) 2, 4 and 6
d) 3, 4 and 5
Answer: (b) 1, 3 and 5 — UPSC Prelims direct question (appeared in exam).

The official criteria for biodiversity hotspot recognition are: (1) Species richness — high number of species, (3) Endemism — species found nowhere else (the core criterion: ≥1,500 endemic vascular plants), (5) Threat perception — level of habitat destruction (core criterion: ≥70% habitat lost). Options 2 (vegetation density), 4 (ethno-botanical importance), and 6 (adaptation to warm/humid conditions) are NOT official criteria. Vegetation density alone doesn’t make a hotspot — a dense monoculture plantation has no endemism. Ethno-botanical importance is irrelevant to the scientific hotspot designation. Adaptation to climate is a biological characteristic, not a hotspot criterion.
MCQ 06 · Medium — Western Ghats UNESCO
With reference to the Western Ghats biodiversity hotspot, which of the following is/are correct?
1. It is designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site
2. It constitutes approximately 27% of India’s total flora
3. The Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve, India’s largest, is located within this hotspot
4. It is home to the purple frog (Nasikabatrachus sahyadrensis) discovered in 2003
a) 1 and 2 only
b) 1, 2 and 3 only
c) 2, 3 and 4 only
d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Answer: (d) All four are correct

Statement 1: CORRECT ★ — 39 sites of the Western Ghats were inscribed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 2012 for their “outstanding universal value” including national parks, wildlife sanctuaries, and reserve forests across 6 states. Statement 2: CORRECT ★ — Despite covering only ~5% of India’s land area, the Western Ghats contain approximately 27% of India’s total plant species. Statement 3: CORRECT ★ — The Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve (spanning Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka) is India’s largest biosphere reserve and was India’s first (declared 1986). It sits within the Western Ghats hotspot. Statement 4: CORRECT ★ — The purple frog (Nasikabatrachus sahyadrensis) was discovered in 2003 — one of the most spectacular recent zoological discoveries. It represents an ancient lineage (800 million years old, related to frogs in Seychelles) that survived in the Western Ghats. Lives underground most of the year, emerging only 2 weeks during monsoon to breed.
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQs — Hotspots & Hope Spots
Why are hotspots NOT just the most biodiverse places — why does the threat criterion matter?
This is the philosophical heart of the hotspot concept — and understanding it makes you think like a conservation scientist.

Imagine two forests: Forest A has 5,000 plant species (half endemic) and is completely intact — zero human threat. Forest B has 2,000 plant species (1,500 endemic) and 80% of it has already been destroyed — only 20% remains.

A purely biodiversity-based ranking would prioritise Forest A. But a hotspot approach says: Forest B needs your attention RIGHT NOW. Forest A is safe — it will be fine without emergency intervention. Forest B is in crisis — without immediate action, those 1,500 endemic species (found nowhere else) will go extinct in years, not decades.

This is the brilliance of Norman Myers’ concept: it combined irreplaceability (endemism) with urgency (threat level) to create a triage system for conservation resources. The world can’t protect everything simultaneously — hotspots tell us WHERE to act first for maximum impact. The Amazon rainforest is extraordinarily biodiverse but still largely intact — it is NOT a hotspot. The Mediterranean Basin is less biodiverse but severely threatened — it IS a hotspot.
What is the difference between a Biodiversity Hotspot, Biosphere Reserve, National Park, and Wildlife Sanctuary?
These four are completely different categories that overlap in confusing ways:

Biodiversity Hotspot — A global conservation concept/designation by Conservation International. Based on endemism + threat. Does NOT provide any legal protection. NOT declared by government. A hotspot can contain multiple national parks and biosphere reserves within it, but the hotspot itself has no legal status.

Biosphere Reserve — UNESCO designation under the Man and Biosphere Programme. Three-zone model: Core (strictly protected) → Buffer → Transition (human activity allowed). Purpose: conservation AND sustainable human use. India has 18 biosphere reserves. Examples: Nilgiri BR (Western Ghats hotspot), Sundarban BR (not in a hotspot), Nanda Devi BR (Himalaya hotspot).

National Park — Highest legal protection under Wildlife Protection Act 1972. Boundaries defined by legislation. No human activity permitted (except tourism with permission). Private rights extinguished. Local people NOT allowed to collect biomass. India: 106 national parks.

Wildlife Sanctuary — Legal protection under Wildlife Protection Act 1972 but lower than NP. Limited biotic interference PERMITTED (hunting prohibited but some human activities allowed). Private rights NOT fully extinguished. India: 567 wildlife sanctuaries.

UPSC trap: A National Park within the Western Ghats hotspot has BOTH the WPA 1972 legal protection AND sits within a globally recognized hotspot — but these are separate designations from separate authorities (Government of India vs Conservation International).
How many biodiversity hotspots does India have — is it 3 or 4? Different sources give different answers.
This confusion arises because the number has changed as the global hotspot list was revised:

Currently: 4 hotspots — Western Ghats + Sri Lanka, Himalaya, Indo-Burma, Sundaland.

Why some sources say 3: Before 2004, the “Eastern Himalayas” were considered part of the Indo-Burma hotspot — not a separate hotspot. So India had 3: Western Ghats, Indo-Burma (including Eastern Himalayas), Sundaland. Older textbooks still show 3.

Why some NCERT-era sources say 3: Some biology textbooks were written before the 2004 reappraisal and list only 3. These are outdated but still circulate.

The confusion about Andaman & Nicobar: Some sources incorrectly treat the entire A&N Islands as a 5th hotspot. WRONG — Andaman = part of Indo-Burma, Nicobar = part of Sundaland.

For UPSC 2026: The answer is definitively 4 hotspots. If a question lists “Eastern Himalayas, Western Himalayas, Western Ghats, and Andaman & Nicobar Islands” — that statement is INCORRECT ★. The correct four are: Western Ghats + Sri Lanka, Himalaya (whole range), Indo-Burma, Sundaland.
What is Great Nicobar Island development controversy and why is it relevant to UPSC?
The Project: A mega development project on Great Nicobar Island (southernmost, largest Nicobar island) was proposed and granted environmental clearance by the National Board for Wildlife and MoEFCC. The project includes: a transshipment port, an international airport, a township (100,000 population), and a military infrastructure project. Total area: ~166 km².

Why it’s controversial:
1. Great Nicobar Island is part of the Sundaland biodiversity hotspot — one of Earth’s most irreplaceable ecosystems
2. The island hosts leatherback sea turtle nesting beaches — these turtles come from thousands of km away to nest here. The port and lights would destroy nesting
3. Unique endemic species: Nicobar megapode (builds huge mound nests on beaches being cleared), Nicobar treeshrew, giant robber crabs
4. The island is a designated Biosphere Reserve, has Tribal Reserve for the Shompen (one of India’s most isolated tribes), and has a Wildlife Sanctuary
5. Clearance was granted despite significant biodiversity concerns — critics argue India is destroying a hotspot for strategic and economic gains

UPSC relevance: Environmental Impact Assessment, conflict between development and conservation, tribal rights under Forest Rights Act, protected area management, India’s biodiversity hotspot commitments under CBD — all come together in this single case. Expected to be a UPSC current affairs question for 2025–26.
What are Cool-Spots and how are they different from Hotspots?
Cool-Spots (also called “cold spots” or “refugia”) are areas that have retained their biodiversity largely intact — either because they are in remote, inaccessible locations OR because they have been effectively protected. They are the opposite of hotspots in terms of remaining integrity.

Key difference:
Hotspot = high endemism + HIGH threat (most destroyed) → requires urgent intervention
Cool-spot = high biodiversity + LOW threat (still largely intact) → should be proactively protected before threats arrive

Examples of cool-spots: Parts of the Amazon interior still untouched by roads or settlements. Congo Basin forests. Papuan Highlands. Parts of Eastern Siberia. Some high-altitude Himalayan valleys.

Conservation strategy: Hotspots need firefighting conservation — emergency action to save what’s left. Cool-spots need preventive conservation — protect them before they become hotspots. Both strategies are needed simultaneously. Resources going only to hotspots (which are already severely degraded) may miss the opportunity to protect intact cool-spots before they become degraded too.
Legacy IAS · Bangalore

Biodiversity Hotspots & Hope Spots · UPSC CSE 2026 · GS Paper III · Environment & Ecology Notes

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