Wetland Ecosystem
Wetlands · Estuaries · Lagoons · Mangroves · Ramsar Convention — simplified with examples, MCQs & PYQs
📋 What’s Inside
- What are Wetlands? — Definition, Types, Importance
- Wetlands vs Lakes — Key Differences
- Estuarine Wetland Ecosystem — Importance & Vegetation
- Estuary vs Lagoon — Easy Comparison
- Mangroves — What & Why
- Adaptive Mechanisms of Mangroves
- Mangroves in India — Status & Key Sites
- Importance & Threats to Mangroves
- Ramsar Convention & India’s Ramsar Sites
- Practice MCQs
- UPSC Prelims PYQs
- FAQ
Wetlands
Land-water transition
Estuaries
River meets sea
Lagoons
Sheltered coastal water
Mangroves
Tidal forests
Adaptations
Pneumatophores & more
Ramsar
International treaty
What are Wetlands?
Wetlands are “areas of marsh, fen, peatland or water, whether natural or artificial, permanent or temporary, with water that is static or flowing, fresh, brackish or salt, including areas of marine water the depth of which at low tide does not exceed six metres.”
Simply put: wetlands are transitional ecosystems between land and water. The water table is at or near the surface or the land is covered by shallow water.
Wetlands are the kidneys of the Earth — they filter water, regulate water flow, and maintain water quality. They are also called the supermarkets of nature — they support incredible biodiversity and provide food for millions. And they are among the most productive ecosystems on Earth — more productive per unit area than most agricultural land.
🔑 Key Characteristics
- Permanently or seasonally flooded with shallow water.
- Support water-adapted vegetation called hydrophytes (water lilies, reeds, sedges, mangroves).
- Have hydric soils — soils that are waterlogged long enough to develop anaerobic (low-oxygen) conditions.
- Act as transition zones between terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.
- Wetlands cover about 6% of Earth’s land surface but support 20% of all known plant and animal species.
- 64% of the world’s wetlands have disappeared in the last century.
Marine/Coastal
Seagrass beds, coral reefs, rocky shores, tidal flats
Estuarine
Deltas, tidal marshes, mangrove swamps
Lacustrine
Lakes and ponds, lake margins
Riverine
Floodplains, river margins, oxbow lakes
Palustrine
Marshes, swamps, bogs (non-tidal freshwater)
Man-made
Rice paddies, fish ponds, reservoirs, salt pans
🔑 Importance of Wetlands
- Flood control: Act as natural sponges — absorb excess rain and release water slowly, reducing downstream flooding.
- Water purification: Filter pollutants, sediments, and excess nutrients from water (the “kidney” function).
- Groundwater recharge: Allow water to percolate into underground aquifers.
- Carbon storage: Peatlands alone store twice as much carbon as all the world’s forests combined, despite covering only 3% of land.
- Biodiversity: Nursery and breeding grounds for fish, amphibians, birds, and reptiles.
- Coastal protection: Mangroves and salt marshes buffer coasts against storm surges and erosion.
- Livelihoods: Support fishing, rice cultivation, ecotourism, and traditional communities.
- Climate regulation: Regulate local temperature and humidity; sequester carbon.
India has over 27,000 wetlands, of which 23,000+ are inland and ~4,000 are coastal. Wetlands occupy 18.4% of India’s area — but 70% of this is under paddy cultivation. Natural wetlands include high-altitude Himalayan lakes (Pangong, Tsomoriri), floodplains of the Ganga and Brahmaputra, saline wetlands of Rajasthan, and coastal wetlands like Sundarbans, Chilika, and Bhitarkanika.
The Ramsar definition of wetlands is frequently quoted in UPSC questions. Key facts: Wetlands cover 6% of Earth but support 20% of biodiversity. 64% of wetlands have disappeared since 1900. Peatlands store twice as much carbon as all forests. World Wetlands Day = 2 February (commemorating the Ramsar Convention signed on 2 February 1971). The Montreux Record lists Ramsar sites undergoing ecological deterioration.
Wetlands vs Lakes
| Parameter | Wetland | Lake |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Transitional ecosystem between land and water; shallow, seasonally or permanently flooded | A deep, inland body of standing water |
| Water depth | Shallow — water table at or near surface; rarely exceeds 6 m depth | Deeper — can be tens to hundreds of metres deep |
| Vegetation | Dominated by hydrophytes — emergent plants (reeds, sedges, mangroves) that grow from the water | Open water with limited emergent vegetation; plants mainly at edges |
| Soil type | Hydric soils — waterlogged, low-oxygen (anaerobic) soils | Regular mineral soils at the lake bottom |
| Productivity | Very high — among the most productive ecosystems on Earth | Moderate — varies with nutrient levels |
| Ecological role | Flood control, water purification, carbon storage, biodiversity hotspot | Water storage, fish production, recreation |
| Transition character | Yes — intermediate between terrestrial and aquatic | No — fully aquatic, open water ecosystem |
| Government scheme | Both covered under centrally sponsored schemes of MoEFCC | Same — National Plan for Conservation of Aquatic Ecosystems (NPCA) |
Think of the difference this way: if you can wade through it and see emergent plants growing — it’s a wetland. If you need a boat and can’t see the bottom — it’s a lake. Wetlands are the shallow edges of the water world; lakes are the deep interior.
Estuarine Wetland Ecosystem
An estuary is a semi-enclosed coastal body of water that has a free connection with the open sea and within which seawater is measurably diluted with fresh water from land drainage (rivers). It is the meeting zone of freshwater and saltwater — a highly dynamic, constantly changing ecosystem. The water in an estuary is brackish — intermediate between fresh and salt water, with salinity constantly varying with tides and river flow.
An estuary is like a mixing bowl at the kitchen counter — freshwater from rivers (the tap) pours in, seawater from the ocean (salt shaker) pours in, and they mix in constantly changing proportions depending on the tides and rainfall. This constant mixing makes estuaries uniquely productive — they receive nutrients from both directions.
🔑 Importance of Estuaries
- Most productive ecosystem: Estuaries are among the most productive ecosystems on Earth — receiving nutrients from rivers and from the sea. High nutrient load supports abundant phytoplankton, which forms the base of a rich food web.
- Nursery for marine life: Over 75% of commercially harvested marine fish and shellfish spend part of their life cycle in estuaries. Juvenile fish, shrimp, and crabs shelter in estuaries before migrating to the open sea.
- Bird habitat: Estuaries and mudflats provide feeding and breeding grounds for millions of migratory birds (waders, ducks, flamingoes). They are critical stopovers on migratory routes (flyways).
- Water filtration: Estuarine vegetation and sediments filter pollutants, excess nutrients, and sediments from river water before it reaches the sea.
- Flood control: Estuaries buffer coastal areas from storm surges by absorbing wave energy.
- Carbon sequestration: Estuarine ecosystems — especially salt marshes and mangroves — are major blue carbon sinks.
- Livelihoods: Support coastal fishing communities, aquaculture, tourism, and port activity.
🔑 Estuarine Vegetation
- Mangroves — dominant vegetation in tropical and subtropical estuaries; salt-tolerant trees that colonise the intertidal zone.
- Salt marshes — in temperate estuaries; dominated by salt-tolerant grasses (Spartina, Salicornia).
- Seagrasses — in shallow estuarine waters; provide habitat and food for fish and dugongs.
- Algae — phytoplankton and benthic algae form the primary producers of the estuarine food web.
- Estuarine vegetation is dominated by halophytes — salt-tolerant plants adapted to brackish conditions.
Sundarbans (Ganga-Brahmaputra-Meghna delta, West Bengal & Bangladesh) — world’s largest mangrove-dominated estuarine ecosystem; UNESCO World Heritage Site; home of the Royal Bengal Tiger. Godavari-Krishna delta (Andhra Pradesh) — significant estuarine system with mangroves. Mahanadi delta (Odisha) — near Bhitarkanika. Indus delta (Gujarat/Pakistan). Narmada & Tapi estuaries (Gujarat). Zuari & Mandovi (Goa) — famous for rich estuarine biodiversity.
Indian estuaries face multiple threats: (1) Pollution — industrial effluents, sewage, and agricultural runoff degrade water quality. (2) Overfishing — depletion of fish stocks that depend on estuaries as nurseries. (3) Land reclamation — conversion of estuarine land for agriculture, aquaculture (shrimp farming), and urban development. (4) Dam construction — upstream dams reduce freshwater flow to estuaries, increasing salinity and disrupting the mixing zone. (5) Sand mining — from estuarine channels damages habitat and destabilises banks.
Estuaries are tested in UPSC in the context of: fisheries (nursery for commercial fish), blue carbon (mangroves + salt marshes), Ramsar sites (Sundarbans, Chilika), and threats (dam-reduced freshwater flows). Key fact: Estuaries are the most productive coastal ecosystems. UPSC also asks about specific Indian estuaries — know Sundarbans, Godavari-Krishna, and Chilika (which is actually a lagoon, not an estuary — see next section).
Estuary vs Lagoon
Estuary = River gate to sea (river actively flows into it). Lagoon = Sea lake behind a barrier (separated from sea by a sandbar/reef, with limited or no direct river input). Chilika Lake is a lagoon, NOT an estuary — even though it’s coastal. This distinction is a classic UPSC trap!
| Parameter | Estuary | Lagoon |
|---|---|---|
| Formation | Where a river meets the sea — the river mouth widens into a semi-enclosed basin | A shallow coastal water body separated from the sea by a narrow barrier (sandbar, barrier island, or reef) |
| Connection to sea | Open, direct connection with the sea — tides flow freely in and out | Restricted connection — only through narrow inlets or passes |
| River input | Yes — a river (or rivers) continuously flows into it, providing freshwater | May or may not have river input; primary connection is to the sea via barrier openings |
| Salinity | Brackish and constantly changing with tides and river flow | Can range from freshwater to hypersaline depending on inflow/evaporation balance |
| Water movement | Strong — influenced by river current and tidal flow | Quieter — sheltered from open sea waves |
| Productivity | Very high — dual nutrient input (river + sea) | High — sheltered conditions favour plankton growth |
| Examples | Sundarbans (Ganga delta), Godavari-Krishna delta, Zuari (Goa) | Chilika Lake (Odisha), Pulicat Lake (Tamil Nadu/AP), Vembanad Lake (Kerala) |
Chilika Lake (Odisha) — Asia’s largest brackish water lagoon; India’s first Ramsar site; separated from Bay of Bengal by a sandy ridge; supports over 1.5 lakh fishermen; famous for Irrawaddy dolphins and flamingoes. Pulicat Lake (Tamil Nadu/Andhra Pradesh) — second largest brackish water lagoon in India; important flamingo habitat. Vembanad Lake (Kerala) — longest lake in India; a key part of Kerala’s backwaters; second largest Ramsar site in India by area.
Mangroves
Mangroves are salt-tolerant trees and shrubs (halophytes) that grow in the intertidal zone of tropical and subtropical coastlines — the area between high tide and low tide marks. They form dense, tangled forests with complex root systems that grow in shallow, oxygen-poor, saline mudflats and estuaries. Mangroves are unique — they can survive where no other tree can: in salty water, with their roots regularly submerged by tides.
Imagine a forest that grows with its feet in the sea — its roots standing in saltwater, twice a day flooded and twice a day exposed. The soil is almost airless (anaerobic) mud. The water is salty enough to kill most plants. Yet mangroves thrive here through extraordinary adaptations. They are the world’s toughest coastal trees — and among its most valuable.
🔑 Where Mangroves Grow — Conditions Required
- Tropical and subtropical coastlines — between 25°N and 25°S latitude (approximately).
- Intertidal zone — submerged at high tide, exposed at low tide.
- Saline or brackish water — can tolerate a wide range of salinity.
- Warm temperatures — mangroves cannot survive frost.
- Fine-grained muddy substrate — they stabilise soft mud with their roots.
- Sheltered coastlines — protected from strong wave action (bays, estuaries, deltas).
Adaptive Mechanisms of Mangroves
Mangroves face three extreme challenges: (1) Salt — seawater is lethal to most plants. (2) Anoxia (no oxygen) — waterlogged muddy soil has almost no oxygen for roots. (3) Unstable substrate — soft tidal mud provides little anchorage. Each adaptation below solves one or more of these problems.
Adaptation 1 — Aerial Roots for Breathing
Since the waterlogged mud has almost no oxygen, mangrove roots cannot get oxygen from below. So they evolve specialized roots that grow above the mud or water to absorb oxygen directly from the air:
- Pneumatophores (pencil/peg roots) — vertical roots that grow upward from the mud like snorkels. Found in Avicennia (grey/white mangrove) and Sonneratia. They have small pores called lenticels that open during low tide to absorb air. At high tide, hydrophobic substances seal the lenticels to prevent flooding.
- Prop roots / Stilt roots — arching roots that grow downward from the trunk or branches into the water, providing both support AND oxygen access. Found in Rhizophora (red mangrove). They also look like a spider’s legs around the trunk.
- Knee roots — roots that loop up and down repeatedly like a bent knee. Found in Bruguiera.
Species: Avicennia (pneumatophores) · Rhizophora (prop roots) · Bruguiera (knee roots) · Sonneratia (pneumatophores)
Adaptation 2 — Salt Management
Mangroves use two strategies to handle excess salt:
- Salt exclusion at roots (ultrafiltration): Some mangroves — especially Rhizophora and Avicennia — have specialised root membranes that act like ultra-fine filters, blocking up to 97% of salt from entering the plant even as they absorb water. The roots do all the work silently underground.
- Salt secretion through leaves: Some mangroves (Avicennia, Aegiceras) have specialised salt glands on their leaves that actively secrete excess salt crystals onto the leaf surface. You can see the salt crystals on the leaves — and taste them! Other mangroves (Bruguiera, Rhizophora) store excess salt in old leaves before shedding them.
Mangroves are called halophytes — plants adapted to high salinity.
Adaptation 3 — Vivipary (Germination on Parent Tree)
Vivipary is the most remarkable mangrove adaptation. Unlike normal plants where seeds fall and then germinate in soil, mangrove seeds begin germinating while still attached to the parent tree — before falling into the water. These germinated seedlings are called propagules.
Why? If a mangrove seed fell into saltwater and tried to germinate, the salt would kill it immediately. By germinating on the parent plant, the seedling gets nutrients and protection from salt during its most vulnerable phase. When the propagule is ready, it detaches and falls into the water — floating and drifting until it finds soft mud to anchor in. It can survive floating for months.
Viviparous species: Rhizophora, Bruguiera, Ceriops, Kandelia. Crypto-viviparous (germinate inside fruit, emerge after detachment): Avicennia, Aegiceras.
Adaptation 4 — Thick Waxy Leaves
Mangrove leaves have a thick, waxy cuticle (coating) to prevent water loss through transpiration — paradoxically, mangroves can suffer from “physiological drought” even surrounded by water, because saltwater makes it harder for roots to absorb water. Thick leaves reduce water loss and dilute the salt absorbed. Some species also have leaf succulence — storing water in thick, fleshy leaves to dilute salt concentration.
Adaptation 5 — Complex Root Systems for Stability
In soft, shifting tidal mud, normal plant roots cannot anchor trees securely. Mangroves develop complex above-ground root networks that spread horizontally over a wide area — like a spider’s web. Prop roots of Rhizophora can spread over many metres around the trunk. Cable roots spread horizontally and then send up pneumatophores. This wide, shallow root network distributes the tree’s weight over a large area — like spreading the load — preventing sinking in soft sediment while also trapping sediment to build more land over time.
⭐ Mangrove Adaptations — Memory Trick (SVTWR)
- Snorkels (Pneumatophores) — Avicennia’s breathing roots pointing upward
- Vivipary — seeds germinate on parent tree before falling
- Thick waxy leaves — reduce water loss, store water to dilute salt
- Water-excluding roots — ultrafiltration blocks salt at root level
- Root network — prop roots (Rhizophora) and cable roots for stability
Quick species-root link: Avicennia = Pneumatophores | Rhizophora = Prop/stilt roots | Bruguiera = Knee roots | Sonneratia = Cone-shaped pneumatophores
Mangrove adaptations are directly tested in UPSC. Key facts: Vivipary solves the problem of germination in saline water. Pneumatophores solve the problem of root respiration in anaerobic waterlogged soil. Know which root type belongs to which genus — Rhizophora (prop roots) and Avicennia (pneumatophores) are most frequently asked. Also note: the Sundarbans is famous for Heritiera fomes (Sundari tree) and Rhizophora species.
Mangroves in India
sq. km mangrove cover (ISFR 2023)
of India’s total geographic area
of world’s mangrove vegetation
mangrove species in India
🏆 Sundarbans (West Bengal)
World’s largest mangrove forest (UNESCO World Heritage Site). Ganga-Brahmaputra-Meghna delta. Only mangrove habitat for Royal Bengal Tiger. Famous for honey (Mouli community). Shared with Bangladesh.
Bhitarkanika (Odisha)
55 of 58 Indian mangrove species found here. Largest nesting ground of Olive Ridley Turtles. Rich in saltwater crocodiles. Ramsar site. Second most species-diverse mangrove in India.
Godavari-Krishna Delta
Significant mangrove system in AP. Second-highest mangrove cover state in India. Also home to endangered Irrawaddy dolphins near Chilika.
Gulf of Kutch / Kori Creek
Largest mangrove area on India’s west coast. Species: Avicennia marina, A. officinalis, Rhizophora mucronata. Gujarat is 3rd largest mangrove state.
Andaman & Nicobar Islands
High mangrove biodiversity due to isolation and pristine conditions. West Bengal, A&N, Tamil Nadu, and Odisha have most species. Rich in endemic species.
Kerala (sparse)
Mangroves very sparse and thin in Kerala despite long coastline. Found mainly along Vembanad and backwaters. Conservation under Kerala Coastal Management Plan.
🔑 State-wise Mangrove Cover (Approx. Ranking)
- 1st — West Bengal: Sundarbans — by far the largest; ~42% of India’s total mangrove cover.
- 2nd — Andhra Pradesh: Godavari-Krishna delta.
- 3rd — Gujarat: Gulf of Kutch and Kori Creek.
- 4th — Andaman & Nicobar Islands
- 5th — Odisha: Bhitarkanika (highest species diversity after West Bengal).
- Other states: Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka, Kerala (sparse).
Know the key facts: Sundarbans = world’s largest mangrove = largest Ramsar site in India = only mangrove Tiger habitat. Bhitarkanika = 55/58 species = second largest in India. India has ~3.3% of world’s mangrove cover. ISFR 2023 shows mangrove cover at 4,992 sq km. Mangrove cover in India has been increasing in recent years — this is a positive trend often asked in UPSC current affairs.
Importance & Threats to Mangroves
🔑 Importance of Mangroves
- Coastal protection: Mangroves are a natural buffer against cyclones, storm surges, tsunamis, and coastal erosion. A 2024 study estimated mangroves provide ~$855 billion in flood protection worldwide. A mangrove forest can reduce coastal storm death tolls by up to two-thirds.
- Blue carbon sink: Mangroves sequester carbon 2–4 times more efficiently than terrestrial forests per unit area. Carbon is stored in plant biomass AND in the anaerobic sediment below — where it can remain locked for millennia.
- Fish factory: Mangroves are breeding, spawning, and nursery grounds for hundreds of commercially important fish, shrimp, and crab species. They support the livelihoods of 210 million coastal people worldwide.
- Biodiversity hotspot: Mangrove ecosystems support over 4,822 species in India alone (ZSI data). Bengal tiger (Sundarbans), saltwater crocodile (Bhitarkanika), Olive Ridley turtle, fishing cats, and kingfishers all depend on mangroves.
- Water purification: Mangrove roots filter pollutants and trap sediments from rivers before they reach coral reefs and seagrass beds.
- Nutrient cycling: Mangrove leaf litter decomposes and provides food (detritus) for a wide range of estuarine invertebrates — worms, crabs, oysters, shrimp — that form the base of the coastal food web.
- Livelihoods: Provide timber, fuelwood, honey (Sundarbans), medicinal plants, and support traditional fishing communities.
Aquaculture
Shrimp and fish farming has destroyed vast mangrove areas globally. Largest driver of mangrove loss (26% of losses 2000–2020).
Agriculture
Conversion to rice paddies and oil palm plantations — 43% of mangrove loss 2000–2020.
Coastal Development
Ports, hotels, industries, and urbanisation encroach on mangrove areas.
Pollution
Industrial effluents, sewage, and oil spills contaminate mangrove soils and water.
Sea Level Rise
Climate change-driven sea-level rise can drown mangroves if they cannot migrate landward.
Cyclones
Severe cyclones physically destroy mangrove forests; increasing cyclone frequency is a climate risk.
Invasive Species
Prosopis juliflora (invasive shrub) outcompetes mangroves in Tamil Nadu. Caulerpa (invasive algae) affects seagrass linked ecosystems.
Overexploitation
Unsustainable harvesting of mangrove timber, fuelwood, and tannin bark.
⭐ Mangrove — UPSC Must-Know Facts
- Mangroves provide $855 billion in flood protection (2024 study)
- Carbon sequestration: 2–4× more efficient than terrestrial forests per unit area
- Sundarbans = world’s largest mangrove = only Tiger mangrove
- Bhitarkanika = 55/58 mangrove species = largest Olive Ridley nesting ground
- India mangrove cover = 4,992 sq km (ISFR 2023); trending upward
- CRZ Notification protects mangroves — classified as CRZ-1 (most protected category)
- Largest threat globally: Aquaculture (shrimp farming) + Agriculture (rice + oil palm)
- Mangroves are halophytes and grow in the intertidal zone
Ramsar Convention & India’s Ramsar Sites
The Ramsar Convention on Wetlands is an intergovernmental treaty signed on 2 February 1971 in Ramsar, Iran. It came into force in 1975. It is the only global environmental treaty dedicated to a specific ecosystem — wetlands. The Convention’s core principle is the “wise use” of all wetlands — maintenance of their ecological character within the context of sustainable development.
🔑 Key Facts about Ramsar Convention
- 172+ contracting parties (countries that have joined).
- Over 2,400 Ramsar Sites globally, covering more than 250 million hectares.
- Country with most sites: United Kingdom (170+ sites).
- Country with largest area under Ramsar protection: Bolivia.
- India joined the Ramsar Convention on 1 February 1982.
- World Wetlands Day = 2 February every year.
- Wise use means: sustainable management of wetlands for human benefit while maintaining ecological character — not simply strict preservation.
- The Montreux Record = register of Ramsar sites where ecological deterioration is occurring/has occurred due to human interference. Both Keoladeo NP (Rajasthan) and Loktak Lake (Manipur) are currently in the Montreux Record. Chilika was added but later removed after restoration.
Total Ramsar Sites in India (Feb 2026)
Largest Ramsar network in South Asia
State with most Ramsar sites
Chilika — India’s 1st Ramsar site
🔑 Important Ramsar Sites in India to Know
- Chilika Lake (Odisha): Asia’s largest brackish water lagoon; India’s first Ramsar site (1981); 1165 sq km. Supports over 1.5 lakh fishermen. Famous for Irrawaddy dolphins, flamingoes, and migratory birds. Was in Montreux Record but removed after restoration.
- Sundarbans (West Bengal): World’s largest mangrove; India’s largest Ramsar site. UNESCO World Heritage Site. Only Tiger mangrove.
- Keoladeo National Park (Rajasthan): Man-made wetland (historic hunting grounds). UNESCO WHS. Currently in Montreux Record due to water scarcity. Famous for Siberian cranes and migratory birds.
- Loktak Lake (Manipur): Largest freshwater lake in northeast India. Famous for phumdis (floating islands of decomposing vegetation). Keibul Lamjao National Park (world’s only floating NP) is located here. In Montreux Record.
- Vembanad-Kol (Kerala): Longest lake in India; second largest Ramsar site in India by area. Part of Kerala backwaters.
- Renuka Lake (Himachal Pradesh): Smallest Ramsar site in India.
- East Kolkata Wetlands (West Bengal): Unique sewage-fed aquaculture system — city’s wastewater is naturally treated by wetlands while producing fish and vegetables. Model of ecological-economic sustainability.
- Harike Barrage (Punjab): At the confluence of Sutlej and Beas rivers. Ramsar site. Important for migratory waterbirds.
A wetland qualifies as a Ramsar site if it meets at least one of nine criteria set by the Convention. These include: supporting threatened or vulnerable species; regularly supporting 20,000 or more waterbirds; supporting 1% of the global population of a waterbird species; being an important example of a wetland type; and providing important fisheries support. Once designated, the host country commits to maintaining the site’s ecological character and reporting regularly on its condition.
⭐ Ramsar Convention — UPSC Must-Know Facts
- Signed: 2 February 1971 in Ramsar, Iran. In force from 1975.
- Only global treaty for a specific ecosystem (wetlands).
- Core principle: “Wise use” of wetlands.
- India joined: 1 February 1982. India has 98 Ramsar sites (Feb 2026) — highest in South Asia.
- India’s first Ramsar site: Chilika Lake (1981).
- Largest Ramsar site in India: Sundarbans.
- Smallest Ramsar site in India: Renuka Lake (HP).
- State with most Ramsar sites: Uttar Pradesh.
- Montreux Record = list of Ramsar sites in ecological crisis. India’s entries: Keoladeo NP + Loktak Lake.
- World Wetlands Day = 2 February.
Ramsar Convention is one of the most tested topics in UPSC Environment. Common questions: (1) Who has the most Ramsar sites? (UK — globally; India — in South Asia). (2) What is the Montreux Record? (3) What is “wise use”? (4) India’s first Ramsar site? (Chilika). (5) Statements about Biosphere Reserve vs Ramsar site — they are separate systems; a wetland can be both. (6) Are Ramsar sites legally binding? — India is obligated under international law but domestic implementation is through Wetland Rules 2017. Also know: India’s resolution on “Promoting Sustainable Lifestyles for Wise Use of Wetlands” was adopted at Ramsar COP 15 (Zimbabwe, 2023).


