International Wildlife Conservation — WWF & IWC UPSC Notes

International Wildlife Conservation Efforts | WWF | IWC | EDGE Species | High Seas Treaty | UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS Bangalore
UPSC Prelims + Mains · International Conventions · Current Affairs 2023–2025

International Efforts Towards
Wildlife Conservation 🌍

WWF · IWC · EDGE Species · High Seas Treaty (BBNJ) · Kunming-Montreal GBF · CMS · CITES · Living Planet Report 2024 · Debt-for-Nature Swap · Earth Hour

1

World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)

The world’s largest conservation organisation — 100+ countries, 5 million+ supporters

World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Founded 1961

Gland, Switzerland · Formerly: World Wildlife Fund · Logo: Giant Panda · NGO
  • Founded: 29 April 1961 in Gland, Switzerland (where it still remains as HQ)
  • Original name: World Wildlife Fund — renamed to World Wide Fund for Nature in 1986. Abbreviation WWF kept.
  • Founders/key figures: Prince Philip (Duke of Edinburgh), Julian Huxley, Peter Scott, Max Nicholson, Guy Mountfort, Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands
  • Logo: Giant Panda (Chi-Chi) — inspired by Chi-Chi, a giant panda brought to London Zoo in 1958 before WWF’s founding. The panda was chosen as it was an instantly recognisable endangered species and worked in black-and-white to save printing costs!
  • Nature: International NGO — NOT a UN body. World’s largest conservation organisation.
  • Scale: Active in 100+ countries; over 5 million supporters; supports 1,000+ projects worldwide
  • Mission: “To conserve nature and reduce the most pressing threats to the diversity of life on Earth.”
  • 6 focus areas: Climate · Food · Forests · Freshwater · Seas/Oceans · Wildlife
  • Priority species: Tigers, Elephants, Gorillas, Giant Pandas, Sea Turtles, Polar Bears, Rhinos, Whales
  • WWF-India: Established November 1969 as a charitable public trust. HQ: New Delhi. Priority species: Bengal Tiger, Asian Elephant, Indian One-horned Rhino, Gangetic Dolphin, Snow Leopard, Red Panda
  • Key campaigns: Earth Hour · Debt-for-Nature Swap · Healthy Grown Potato (eco-brand) · Vulture Count 2024
Earth Hour — WWF’s Most Visible Campaign
Earth Hour
  • Annual global event where participants switch off non-essential lights for one hour — usually the last Saturday of March at 8:30 PM local time
  • Started: 2007 in Sydney, Australia
  • Purpose: Symbolically raise awareness about climate change and biodiversity loss. Now involves 190+ countries and millions of cities, individuals, and businesses
  • Note: Earth Hour is a symbol — it does NOT claim to save significant electricity. Its real value is as a global public awareness and advocacy event.
Debt-for-Nature Swap
Debt-for-Nature Swap (Debt-for-Conservation Swap)
  • A financial mechanism where a portion of a developing country’s foreign debt is forgiven in exchange for commitments by that country to invest in conservation of its own natural environment
  • First proposed in 1984 by US biologist Thomas Lovejoy (WWF). First swap: Bolivia (1987)
  • How it works: A conservation organisation (like WWF) or creditor government purchases the debt at a discount in the secondary debt market → the debtor country agrees to use the equivalent amount in local currency for conservation programmes
  • Benefit: Developing countries with rich biodiversity but high debt burden can use this mechanism to simultaneously reduce debt AND fund conservation — reducing the “poverty vs environment” trade-off
  • Examples: Bolivia (first, 1987), Ecuador, Costa Rica, Philippines, Madagascar have all engaged in debt-for-nature swaps
  • Recent relevance: Growing interest in “blue bonds” and “debt-for-nature” mechanisms under the Kunming-Montreal GBF framework
2

Living Planet Report 2024 Current Affairs Oct 2024

WWF’s flagship report — 73% wildlife population decline in 50 years
🔴 Living Planet Report 2024 — Key Findings (Released October 2024)
  • 73% decline in the average size of monitored wildlife populations in just 50 years (1970–2020)
  • This is the 15th edition of the biennial Living Planet Report
  • Uses the Living Planet Index (LPI) — developed by Zoological Society of London (ZSL) — which tracks nearly 35,000 vertebrate populations across 5,495 species
  • Primary drivers: Habitat loss, overexploitation, climate change, pollution, invasive species, diseases
  • WWF warns: Ecosystem tipping points — once crossed, changes are sudden and irreversible
Declines by Ecosystem Type

💧 Freshwater Ecosystems

85% decline

Highest decline. Rivers, lakes, wetlands — most impacted by dams, pollution, over-extraction

🌳 Terrestrial Ecosystems

69% decline

Forests, grasslands, deserts — deforestation and land conversion are primary drivers

🌊 Marine Ecosystems

56% decline

Oceans — overfishing, ocean acidification, plastic pollution, coral bleaching

Declines by Region
🌎

Latin America & Caribbean

95% decline — the steepest globally. Amazon deforestation and habitat loss are major factors.

🌍

Africa

76% decline. Poaching, habitat loss, human-wildlife conflict driving the decline.

🌏

Asia-Pacific

60% decline. Pollution, habitat loss, and unsustainable wildlife trade are key drivers.

🌍

Europe & North America

Lower decline rates (39% — North America) — stronger legal frameworks and conservation investment.

📌 UPSC Key — Living Planet Report
  • Released by: WWF (biennial — every two years, since 1998)
  • LPI (Living Planet Index) calculated by: ZSL (Zoological Society of London)
  • LPR 2024: 73% decline in 50 years (1970–2020)
  • Worst ecosystem: Freshwater (85%) → Terrestrial (69%) → Marine (56%)
  • Worst region: Latin America & Caribbean (95%)
  • LPI monitors: 35,000 vertebrate populations across 5,495 species
  • LPR 2022 (previous): 69% decline — 2024 shows the crisis deepening
3

International Whaling Commission (IWC)

The global body for whale conservation — and the story of the 1986 moratorium

International Whaling Commission (IWC) Est. 1946

Cambridge, UK · Inter-governmental · 88 member countries · Moratorium on commercial whaling since 1986
  • Established: 1946 under the International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling (ICRW)
  • HQ: Cambridge, United Kingdom
  • Members: 88 member governments from all over the world
  • Original purpose: “For the proper conservation of whale stocks and orderly development of the whaling industry” — initially pro-whaling
  • Transformation: In the late 1960s–70s, as environmental awareness grew and whale populations crashed, former whaling nations turned conservation advocates. In 1979, IWC banned factory ship whaling (except minke) and declared the Indian Ocean a whale sanctuary
  • Scientific Committee: ~200 of the world’s leading cetacean scientists; meets annually
  • Three types of whaling regulated: Commercial · Aboriginal Subsistence · Special Permit (Scientific)
Key Timeline — IWC History
1946

IWC established — originally to regulate whaling industry, not conserve whales

1979

IWC declares Indian Ocean a whale sanctuary; bans factory ship hunting (except minke). Membership starts growing with non-whaling conservation nations.

1982

IWC votes by 25–7 to adopt commercial whaling moratorium — to take effect from 1985/86 season. Japan, Norway, Peru, USSR lodge formal objections.

1986

Commercial whaling moratorium comes into full force — all commercial harvest quotas set to ZERO. Historic milestone for ocean conservation.

1994

IWC declares the Southern Ocean a whale sanctuary — the entire waters around Antarctica

2006

Iceland resumes commercial whaling under a reservation to the moratorium it filed upon rejoining IWC in 2002

2019

Japan withdraws from IWC and immediately resumes commercial whaling in Japanese waters — no longer bound by the moratorium

📌 UPSC Key Points — IWC
  • IWC established: 1946 | HQ: Cambridge, UK | Members: 88 governments
  • Moratorium adopted: 1982 | In force: 1986
  • Indian Ocean Sanctuary: 1979 | Southern Ocean Sanctuary: 1994
  • Norway: Lodged objection → continues commercial whaling (North Atlantic minke)
  • Japan: Withdrew from IWC in 2019 → resumes commercial whaling
  • Aboriginal Subsistence Whaling: Still permitted — quotas renewed in 2024 (next review 2030)
  • Moratorium status: Still in force for member countries — not lifted
4

EDGE Species — Evolutionarily Distinct and Globally Endangered

ZSL’s unique approach — saving the tree of life, not just popular species

💡 Think of EDGE species as “One-of-a-Kind Antiques” in the Museum of Life

In a museum of life (the Tree of Life), most species are like mass-produced prints — if one is lost, others are similar. But EDGE species are like priceless, one-of-a-kind antiques — no close relatives exist. The Gharial is so evolutionarily distinct it is in its own family (Gavialidae) that diverged from crocodiles 65 million years ago. If it goes extinct, an entire evolutionary branch — 65 million years of unique biology — vanishes forever. This is what EDGE conservation is about: protecting irreplaceable evolutionary heritage, not just popular, charismatic species.

EDGE of Existence Programme — Zoological Society of London (ZSL) Launched 2007

ZSL · London · Only global conservation initiative specifically targeting evolutionarily unique threatened species
  • Developed by: Zoological Society of London (ZSL) — launched in January 2007
  • The only global conservation initiative focused specifically on threatened species that represent large amounts of unique evolutionary history
  • Updated to EDGE2 protocol (2022) — improved methodology for dealing with uncertainty and accounting for extinction risk of related species
  • EDGE Index included as indicator under Target 4 of the Kunming-Montreal GBF — official recognition in global biodiversity targets
  • EDGE Fellows Programme: 2-year fellowships to early-career conservationists from biodiversity-rich, low-resource countries (Latin America, Asia) — including India
How the EDGE Score is Calculated
🧬

ED Score
(Evolutionary Distinctiveness)

Calculated from a phylogenetic tree. Species with long isolated branches (few close relatives, evolved independently for millions of years) get HIGH ED scores. Example: Gharial, Platypus, Aardvark.

+
⚠️

GE Score
(Global Endangerment)

Based on IUCN Red List status. CR = highest score; EN = next; VU = next. More endangered = higher GE score. Combined with ED to get EDGE score.

EDGE Score = log(1 + ED) + (GE × log 2)
EDGE Species — Key Points for UPSC
  • EDGE species = High Evolutionary Distinctiveness (ED) + Threatened (CR/EN/VU on IUCN)
  • Extinction of an EDGE species = loss of millions of years of unique evolution — cannot be replaced by any other species
  • Indian EDGE bird species (15 species): Great Indian Bustard · Bengal Florican · Lesser Florican · Sociable Lapwing · Jerdon’s Courser (grassland/scrub threats) + Spoon-billed Sandpiper · Siberian Crane · White-bellied Heron (wetland threats) + Forest Owlet (deciduous forest)
  • Top EDGE mammals globally: Bactrian Camel (CR), Yangtze Finless Porpoise (CR), Hirola Antelope (CR), Chinese Pangolin (CR)
  • Top EDGE reptile globally: Gharial — Critically Endangered and the world’s most evolutionarily distinct crocodilian
  • Highest EDGE scores overall: Maidenhair Tree (Ginkgo biloba) and Wollemi Pine — both plant species with EDGE scores over 100
  • BNHS (Bombay Natural History Society) works with ZSL to conserve EDGE bird species in India
  • EDGE2 (2022): Updated protocol — improved scientific methodology; EDGE Index now in Kunming-Montreal GBF Target 4 indicators
5

High Seas Treaty / BBNJ Agreement Current Affairs 2023–2026

The historic agreement to govern 61% of the ocean — in force from January 2026

BBNJ Agreement — Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction Adopted June 2023

Entered into force: 17 January 2026 · Under UNCLOS · “High Seas Treaty”
  • Full name: “Agreement under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas beyond National Jurisdiction”
  • Common name: High Seas Treaty or BBNJ Agreement
  • Finalised: 4 March 2023 (after nearly 20 years of negotiations) | Adopted: 19 June 2023
  • Entered into force: 17 January 2026 (after 60th ratification — Morocco in September 2025)
  • What it governs: The High Seas — areas beyond national jurisdiction (ABNJ) — which cover 61% of the ocean’s surface area and nearly half of Earth’s surface. Previously ungoverned for biodiversity.
  • Key provisions:
    • Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) in high seas — can now legally be established
    • Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs) mandatory for activities that may harm high seas biodiversity
    • Benefit sharing of Marine Genetic Resources (MGRs) — fair and equitable sharing of benefits from high seas genetic resources
    • Capacity building and technology transfer for developing nations
  • Significance: Enables the 30×30 target (protect 30% of ocean by 2030 under Kunming-Montreal GBF) — which was impossible without this treaty
  • India signed the BBNJ Agreement — supporting this multilateral ocean governance effort
📌 UPSC Key — High Seas Treaty
  • Finalised: 4 March 2023 | Adopted: 19 June 2023
  • Entered into force: 17 January 2026 (60th ratification — Morocco, September 2025)
  • Governs: 61% of ocean surface (areas beyond national jurisdiction)
  • Under: UNCLOS (UN Convention on the Law of the Sea)
  • Enables: MPAs in high seas + EIAs + MGR benefit sharing
  • Connection: Linked to Kunming-Montreal GBF 30×30 target
6

Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework — 30×30 Current Affairs 2022–2024

The world’s roadmap to halt biodiversity loss — adopted December 2022, COP16 progress 2024

Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) COP15 Dec 2022

CBD COP15 · Montreal, Canada · Replaces Aichi Targets · Vision: “Living in harmony with nature by 2050”
  • Adopted at: CBD COP15, Montreal, Canada, December 2022 (chaired by China, hosted by Canada)
  • Replaces: Aichi Biodiversity Targets (2011–2020) — all 20 of which were missed
  • Vision: “Living in harmony with nature by 2050”
  • Contains 4 Goals and 23 Targets for 2030
  • Most famous target — Target 3 (30×30): Protect 30% of the planet’s land, inland waters, coastal areas, and oceans by 2030
  • Finance target: Mobilise $200 billion/year for biodiversity by 2030 from all sources; provide at least $30 billion/year to developing countries by 2030
  • Harmful subsidies: Reduce harmful subsidies damaging biodiversity by at least $500 billion/year by 2030
  • Business disclosure (Target 15): Companies to monitor, assess, and disclose their risks, dependencies, and impacts on biodiversity
  • COP16 (Cali, Colombia, October 2024): CBD’s most recent COP. Key outcomes: Cali Fund established for DSI benefit sharing; new body for indigenous peoples under Article 8(j). Suspended without quorum for some items. Rome resumed session (COP16.2, February 2025): agreed on Resource Mobilisation Strategy + monitoring framework
📌 UPSC Key — Kunming-Montreal GBF
  • GBF adopted: CBD COP15, Montreal, December 2022
  • Most famous target: 30×30 — 30% of land and sea protected by 2030
  • Finance: $200 billion/year by 2030 | $30 billion/year to developing nations by 2030
  • Harmful subsidies: Reduce by $500 billion/year by 2030
  • COP16: Cali, Colombia, October 2024 — “People’s COP” | Cali Fund established
  • COP16.2 (resumed): Rome, February 2025 — Resource Mobilisation Strategy agreed
  • EDGE Index included as indicator under GBF Target 4
7

Convention on Migratory Species (CMS)

Protecting species that cross borders — under the UNEP umbrella

Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) — Bonn Convention Est. 1979

Bonn, Germany · UNEP Convention · 133 parties · Migratory species across international boundaries
  • Full name: Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals — also called the Bonn Convention
  • Established: 1979 | In force: 1983 | HQ: Bonn, Germany
  • Under: UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme) — a UN treaty
  • Parties: 133 countries (India is a party)
  • Focus: Conservation and sustainable use of migratory animals — species that move across national boundaries
  • Appendix I: Migratory species listed as Endangered — strict protection, prohibition of taking, except in extraordinary circumstances. Snow Leopard (listed since 1985), Siberian Crane, Marine Turtles
  • Appendix II: Migratory species with unfavourable conservation status or which would benefit from international agreements. Range states encouraged to conclude agreements.
  • CMS COP14 (2023): Held in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. Added several species including African wild ass, saiga antelope
  • India’s key migratory species under CMS: Snow Leopard, Amur Falcon, Great Indian Bustard, Marine Turtles, Gangetic Dolphin, Elephants (African/Asian cross-border populations)
8

CITES — Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species

Regulating the world’s wildlife trade — 3 Appendices, 183 parties

CITES — Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species In force 1975

Geneva, Switzerland · 183 member parties · 3 Appendices · UNEP administered
  • Established: 1963 (Washington DC) | In force: 1975 | Parties: 183 countries
  • HQ: Geneva, Switzerland (administered by UNEP)
  • Regulates international trade in over 38,000 species of animals and plants
  • Appendix I: Species threatened with extinction — commercial trade prohibited. Examples: All great apes, Indian Rhino, Snow Leopard, Tiger, Asian Elephant, Gharial, all Marine Turtles
  • Appendix II: Not immediately threatened but trade must be controlled to prevent extinction. Requires export permit. Examples: Saltwater Crocodile, Queen Conch, some shark species
  • Appendix III: Species protected by at least one country which requests CITES assistance
  • CITES COP19 (Panama, 2022): Major outcomes: 104 shark and ray species added to Appendix II; India proposals accepted (Red-crowned Roofed Turtle — Appendix I; Dalbergia sissoo — relief from Appendix II; Jeypore Ground Gecko — Appendix I)
  • CITES COP20 (Geneva, 2025): Expected to address more shark species, elephant ivory trade, and new emerging trade threats
9

Other Key International Conservation Efforts

Important organisations, conventions, and initiatives for UPSC
🔬

IUCN SSC (Species Survival Commission)

IUCN’s network of 10,000+ volunteer scientists. Develops Red List assessments, conservation action plans. Runs specialist groups for each species/group (e.g., Asian Rhino SG, Crocodile SG). IUCN HQ: Gland, Switzerland. Est. 1948.

🐆

International Big Cat Alliance (IBCA)

Launched by PM Modi, April 9, 2023. 7 big cats (Tiger, Lion, Leopard, Snow Leopard, Cheetah, Jaguar, Puma). 97 range countries. HQ: Mysuru, Karnataka. India’s leadership in global big cat conservation.

🐘

MIKE Programme (CITES)

Monitoring Illegal Killing of Elephants. CITES programme tracking elephant poaching trends. Identifies poaching hotspots. 10 MIKE sites in India (including Kaziranga, Nilgiris). Key anti-poaching intelligence tool.

🌿

CBD — Convention on Biological Diversity

3 objectives: Conservation of biodiversity · Sustainable use · Fair & equitable benefit sharing. Est. 1992 (Rio Earth Summit). 196 parties (USA not a party). COP16: Cali, October 2024. India is a party.

🌊

Ramsar Convention on Wetlands

First intergovernmental environmental treaty. Est. 1971, in force 1975. HQ: Gland, Switzerland. India: 85 Ramsar sites (2024). World Wetlands Day: February 2.

🌳

UNFCCC + Paris Agreement

Climate change indirectly affects biodiversity. Paris Agreement target: 1.5°C warming limit. UNFCCC COP29: Baku, Azerbaijan, November 2024 — focus on climate finance for nature. NCQG: New Collective Quantified Goal.

🔬

IPBES — Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity

Called the “IPCC of Biodiversity”. Established 2012. Assesses state of biodiversity for governments. 2019 Global Assessment: 1 million species face extinction. HQ: Bonn, Germany. India is a member.

🦈

TRAFFIC

The Wildlife Trade Monitoring Network. Joint programme of IUCN and WWF. Monitors wildlife trade globally. Works with CITES on implementation. Key partner in anti-poaching and trade regulation.

International Conservation Efforts — Master Quick Reference
Organisation / TreatyEst.HQNatureKey Role / Famous For
WWF (World Wide Fund for Nature)1961Gland, SwitzerlandNGOWorld’s largest conservation org; Living Planet Report; Earth Hour; Giant Panda logo
IWC (International Whaling Commission)1946Cambridge, UKInter-governmentalCommercial whaling moratorium (1986); Indian Ocean (1979) & Southern Ocean (1994) sanctuaries
IUCN1948Gland, SwitzerlandNGO (network)Red List; Species Survival Commission; Green Status; 160+ countries
CITES1963/1975Geneva, SwitzerlandUN TreatyRegulates wildlife trade; 183 parties; 3 Appendices; COP19 Panama 2022
CMS (Bonn Convention)1979/1983Bonn, GermanyUNEP TreatyMigratory species; Appendix I (endangered) & II; Snow Leopard listed since 1985
CBD (Convention on Biological Diversity)1992Montreal, CanadaUN Treaty3 objectives; Kunming-Montreal GBF 30×30; COP16 Cali 2024; Nagoya Protocol (ABS)
Ramsar Convention1971/1975Gland, SwitzerlandIntergovernmentalWetland conservation; 2,400+ Ramsar Sites globally; India: 85 sites; Feb 2 = World Wetlands Day
ZSL EDGE Programme2007London, UKNGO initiativeEvolutionary distinctiveness + endangered; Gharial top reptile; EDGE2 (2022); EDGE Fellows
BBNJ / High Seas Treaty2023 (adopted)UN (New York)UNCLOS TreatyHigh seas (61% of ocean) governance; MPAs; EIAs; MGR benefit sharing; In force Jan 2026
Kunming-Montreal GBFDec 2022 (COP15)Montreal, CanadaCBD framework30×30 target; $200B/year finance; vision 2050; replaces Aichi targets; COP16 Cali 2024
IPBES2012Bonn, GermanyIntergovernmental“IPCC of Biodiversity”; 1 million species facing extinction (2019); science-policy interface
IBCA (International Big Cat Alliance)April 2023Mysuru, IndiaIndia initiative7 big cats; 97 range countries; PM Modi; India’s global conservation leadership

⭐ Complete UPSC Cheat Sheet — International Conservation

  • WWF: Founded 29 April 1961 | HQ: Gland, Switzerland | Logo: Giant Panda | NGO | 100+ countries
  • Living Planet Report 2024: 73% decline in 50 years | Freshwater: 85% | Terrestrial: 69% | Marine: 56% | Released by ZSL
  • LPI (Living Planet Index): ZSL + WWF | 35,000 populations | 5,495 species
  • Earth Hour: 2007, Sydney | Last Saturday of March | 190+ countries
  • Debt-for-Nature Swap: First = Bolivia 1987 | Debt forgiven ↔ conservation commitment
  • IWC: Est. 1946 | HQ: Cambridge, UK | Moratorium: 1982 adopted, 1986 in force
  • IWC Sanctuaries: Indian Ocean (1979) + Southern Ocean (1994)
  • Japan withdrew from IWC: 2019 | Norway: objects but stays | Iceland: reservation
  • EDGE = Evolutionarily Distinct + Globally Endangered | By ZSL (Zoological Society of London) | Launched 2007 | Updated: EDGE2 (2022)
  • Indian EDGE birds: Great Indian Bustard · Bengal Florican · Spoon-billed Sandpiper · Siberian Crane · Forest Owlet
  • High Seas Treaty BBNJ: Finalised 4 March 2023 | In force: 17 January 2026 | Governs 61% of ocean
  • GBF 30×30: CBD COP15, December 2022 | Protect 30% land & sea by 2030 | $200 billion/year
  • CMS: Bonn Convention | Est. 1979 | HQ: Bonn, Germany | Snow Leopard: Appendix I since 1985
  • CITES: Est. 1963 in force 1975 | HQ: Geneva | 183 parties | Appendix I = trade banned
  • IPBES: “IPCC of Biodiversity” | 2012 | 1 million species facing extinction (2019 report)
  • IBCA: 9 April 2023 | PM Modi | 7 big cats | HQ: Mysuru | 97 countries

🧪 Practice MCQs — Test Yourself
Practice
Q1. Consider the following about the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF): 1. WWF was founded in 1961 and is headquartered in Gland, Switzerland. 2. The Living Planet Report is released annually by WWF. 3. WWF’s logo is the Giant Panda, inspired by Chi-Chi at London Zoo. 4. WWF-India was established in 1969 as a charitable public trust. Which are CORRECT?
✅ Answer: (d) — 1, 3 and 4 only
1 ✅: WWF founded 29 April 1961; HQ: Gland, Switzerland. Correct. 2 ❌ Wrong: The Living Planet Report is released biennially (every two years) — NOT annually. It has been published since 1998. LPR 2024 is the 15th edition. 3 ✅: The Giant Panda logo was inspired by Chi-Chi, a panda brought to London Zoo in 1958 — 3 years before WWF’s founding. The panda design was also chosen because it worked well in black-and-white (to save printing costs!). 4 ✅: WWF-India was established in November 1969 as a charitable trust. It operates autonomously with its Secretariat in New Delhi.
Current Affairs2024
Q2. According to the Living Planet Report 2024, which type of ecosystem experienced the highest rate of wildlife population decline between 1970 and 2020?
✅ Answer: (c) Freshwater — 85% decline
LPR 2024 found that freshwater ecosystems experienced the sharpest decline — 85% — among all ecosystem types. The order: Freshwater (85%) → Terrestrial (69%) → Marine (56%). The overall average across all ecosystems is 73% decline in 50 years (1970–2020). Freshwater ecosystems are most impacted by: dam construction blocking migrations, water extraction, agricultural runoff, pollution, and invasive species. Rivers and lakes have lost species at catastrophic rates. Option (a) confuses “marine 56%” with “marine 85%”. Option (b) confuses the overall average (73%) with the terrestrial figure. Option (d) is incorrect — 91% is the figure for Latin America and the Caribbean region decline, not forest ecosystems globally.
PYQUPSC 2019
Which of the following best describes the concept of “debt-for-nature swap”?
✅ Official Answer: (c)
A Debt-for-Nature Swap is a financial mechanism where a portion of a developing country’s foreign debt is forgiven (or purchased at a discount) in exchange for that country committing to invest the equivalent amount in local currency for conservation of its natural environment. First proposed by biologist Thomas Lovejoy in 1984. First implemented in Bolivia in 1987. Key logic: Many biodiversity-rich countries are also heavily indebted — this mechanism aligns their financial incentives with conservation goals. WWF and other NGOs have been key facilitators of these swaps. This concept is increasingly relevant under the Kunming-Montreal GBF’s need for innovative conservation finance mechanisms.
Practice
Q4. Which of the following statements about the International Whaling Commission (IWC) is/are correct? 1. IWC was established in 1946. 2. The commercial whaling moratorium was adopted in 1982 and came into force in 1986. 3. Japan continues commercial whaling as a member of IWC under scientific permit provisions. 4. The IWC has declared both the Indian Ocean and the Southern Ocean as whale sanctuaries. Select the correct answer:
✅ Answer: (c) — 1, 2 and 4 only
1 ✅: IWC established in 1946. 2 ✅: Moratorium adopted 1982; came into force 1986. 3 ❌ Wrong: Japan withdrew from IWC in 2019 — it is no longer a member. Japan now conducts commercial whaling in its own waters independently. Before 2019, Japan did use scientific permit provisions — but it is no longer in the IWC. 4 ✅: IWC declared the Indian Ocean a whale sanctuary in 1979 and the Southern Ocean a whale sanctuary in 1994.
Practice
Q5. EDGE species, as defined by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), are identified based on: 1. Their economic value to local communities 2. Their Evolutionary Distinctiveness (ED) score — uniqueness on the tree of life 3. Their Global Endangerment (GE) score — IUCN Red List status 4. Their geographic range — species found in fewer than 3 countries Select the correct answer:
✅ Answer: (c) — 2 and 3 only
2 ✅ Evolutionary Distinctiveness (ED): Measured using a phylogenetic tree — species that have been evolving independently for millions of years with few close relatives get high ED scores. Examples: Gharial (family Gavialidae, diverged 65 million years ago), Platypus, Aardvark. 3 ✅ Global Endangerment (GE): Based directly on IUCN Red List status — CR gets the highest GE score, then EN, VU. 1 ❌ Wrong: Economic value is NOT a factor in the EDGE score. Conservation priority is based purely on evolutionary uniqueness + threat level. 4 ❌ Wrong: Geographic range is not directly a factor — some species with tiny ranges may have low ED scores if they have many close relatives.
Current Affairs2023
Q6. Consider the following about the High Seas Treaty (BBNJ Agreement): 1. It was finalised on 4 March 2023 after nearly 20 years of negotiations. 2. It governs areas beyond national jurisdiction, which cover about 61% of the ocean surface. 3. It entered into force on 17 January 2026 after the 60th country ratified it. 4. It allows any country to mine deep sea resources in high seas without any restrictions. Which are CORRECT?
✅ Answer: (c) — 1, 2 and 3 only
1 ✅: Finalised 4 March 2023, after nearly 20 years of work (negotiations formally began 2018). 2 ✅: Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction (ABNJ) cover ~61% of the ocean surface — previously the “wild west” of ocean governance for biodiversity. 3 ✅: Entered into force 17 January 2026 after Morocco became the 60th ratifying country in September 2025. 4 ❌ Wrong: The treaty explicitly DOES NOT allow unrestricted deep sea mining. It requires Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs) for activities that may harm marine biodiversity, and establishes mechanisms for creating Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) in high seas. Deep sea mining is a contentious issue being addressed separately by the International Seabed Authority (ISA).
📜 UPSC Prelims PYQs — Official Past Questions
PYQUPSC 2018
With reference to the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), which of the following statements is/are correct? 1. IUCN is an organ of the United Nations (UN). 2. CITES is legally binding on the States that have joined it. 3. The aim of IUCN is protection of nature and natural resources. 4. The aim of CITES is to ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival. Select the correct answer:
✅ Official Answer: (d) 2, 3 and 4 only
1 ❌ Wrong: IUCN is NOT a UN organ — it is an NGO (independent non-governmental organisation). It was founded in 1948 in Fontainebleau, France, and is headquartered in Gland, Switzerland. It has observer status at the UN General Assembly but is not part of the UN system. 2 ✅: CITES is a legally binding international agreement — States that join it are legally obligated to implement its provisions through national legislation. 3 ✅: IUCN’s mission is the conservation of nature and natural resources — protecting biodiversity and promoting sustainable use. 4 ✅: CITES aim: to ensure that international trade in wild animals and plants does NOT threaten their survival — through a system of permits and trade regulations (Appendices I, II, III).
PYQUPSC 2017
Consider the following: 1. Bats 2. Bears 3. Rodents The phenomenon of hibernation is observed among which of the above?
✅ Official Answer: (d) All three
Hibernation is a state of prolonged torpor (deep sleep) to survive winter when food is scarce. All three groups include hibernating species: Bats (1 ✅): Many bat species hibernate — their metabolic rate drops dramatically. Cave-dwelling bats in temperate regions hibernate in large colonies. Bears (2 ✅): Bears undergo winter torpor (though debate exists on whether it is “true” hibernation — their body temperature drops less than true hibernators). Rodents (3 ✅): Ground squirrels, dormice, hamsters, and marmots are classic hibernators. The context is UPSC’s biodiversity and ecology questions, relevant to international conservation as these species face threats from climate change disrupting hibernation patterns.
PYQUPSC 2020
With reference to the Convention on Biological Diversity, consider the following statements: 1. It is a treaty under the United Nations Environment Programme. 2. It has led to the Nagoya Protocol. 3. The United States of America is a party to it. Which of the above statements is/are correct?
✅ Official Answer: (b) 1 and 2 only
1 ✅: CBD was negotiated under the auspices of UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme) — it emerged from the 1992 Rio Earth Summit. It is an international legally binding treaty. 2 ✅: CBD led to the Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) — adopted at COP10 in Nagoya, Japan (2010). The Nagoya Protocol operationalises the CBD’s third objective (fair and equitable benefit sharing from biological resources). 3 ❌ Wrong: The United States of America has NOT ratified the CBD — it is one of the very few UN member states (along with the Vatican) not to be a party. The US signed but has not ratified, primarily due to concerns over national sovereignty, economic interests, and rules about sharing benefits from genetic resources.
PYQUPSC 2022
Which one of the following is the best description of the term “ecosystem services”?
✅ Official Answer: (c) Benefits humans derive from ecosystems
Ecosystem services are the direct and indirect contributions that ecosystems make to human well-being — the benefits that nature provides to humans. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005) categorised them into: Provisioning services (food, water, timber, medicine), Regulating services (climate regulation, flood control, pollination, disease regulation), Cultural services (recreation, spiritual, educational), and Supporting services (nutrient cycling, soil formation). This concept is central to international conservation: the WWF’s Living Planet Report 2025 research specifically quantified the “invisible” ecosystem benefits from wildlife that humans depend on — 73% decline in wildlife populations means 73% less of these services.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

The IUCN Red List tells us HOW THREATENED a species is — but it doesn’t tell us HOW UNIQUE or IRREPLACEABLE it is. A species can be Critically Endangered but have many close relatives (so its extinction, while sad, doesn’t represent a massive unique loss). Conversely, a species can be Vulnerable (not the most urgent category) but be so evolutionarily isolated that its extinction would eliminate an entire branch of the Tree of Life representing 100+ million years of evolution. EDGE combines both: uniqueness (ED) + threat (GE). The key insight: conventional conservation often focuses on the most charismatic species or the most numerous threatened ones. EDGE redirects attention to species that are BOTH unique and at risk — species like the Gharial, which has no close relatives since it diverged from crocodiles 65 million years ago. Losing the Gharial is not just losing a species — it’s losing an entire evolutionary lineage with no substitute.
Japan’s withdrawal from IWC in 2019 was significant but not entirely surprising. Japan had been conducting “scientific whaling” under Article VIII of the International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling since 1987 — a loophole that allowed killing hundreds of whales annually for ostensibly scientific purposes (but the meat was sold commercially). The IWC repeatedly called on Japan to stop, but Japan continued. In 2018, Japan proposed at the IWC to resume limited commercial whaling — the proposal was rejected. Japan then announced withdrawal, citing “irreconcilable” differences between whaling and non-whaling nations. Since withdrawing, Japan has resumed commercial whaling only in its own Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) and surrounding waters — NOT in the Antarctic. Japan must also submit catch data to the IWC. So the practical impact: Japan catches far fewer whales than during its “scientific whaling” era in Antarctica. Conservation groups consider this a slightly better outcome than the status quo. The bigger concern is whether Japan’s withdrawal normalises exit from multilateral conservation agreements.
The 30×30 target (protecting 30% of land and 30% of ocean by 2030) is the centrepiece of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Its significance: (1) Scale: Currently only about 17% of land and 8% of oceans are protected globally. Reaching 30% requires a massive expansion of protected area systems globally. (2) Science basis: Research suggests that protecting 30% of land and sea (strategically chosen) could prevent ~80% of projected extinctions while maintaining 90% of carbon stocks. (3) Ocean governance gap: Without the BBNJ/High Seas Treaty (entered into force January 2026), it was legally impossible to create MPAs in the high seas — making 30% ocean protection mathematically impossible. India’s commitment: India is a CBD party and voted for the GBF at COP15. India currently has about 5% of its land area in Protected Areas — significantly below 30%. India has been increasing Protected Area coverage but reaching 30% would require massive expansion. India actively participated in CBD COP16 (Cali, 2024) and supports the GBF framework.
Legacy IAS — UPSC Civil Services Coaching, Bangalore  |  Content updated to 2025-26. High Seas Treaty (BBNJ) entered into force 17 January 2026. Living Planet Report 2024 (73% decline) data included. Kunming-Montreal GBF and COP16 Cali 2024 outcomes covered. IBCA 2023, EDGE2 2022 updates included. All IWC developments including Japan’s 2019 withdrawal verified.

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