Biosphere Reserves & Natural World Heritage Sites 🌍
India: 18 Biosphere Reserves · 13 UNESCO-recognized (as of Sept 2025) · Cold Desert BR = India’s 13th UNESCO BR (Sept 27, 2025) · First BR = Nilgiri 1986 · UNESCO MAB Programme 1971 · 44 UNESCO World Heritage Sites (36 Cultural + 7 Natural + 1 Mixed) · Khangchendzonga = India’s only Mixed WHC
UNESCO’s Man and the Biosphere (MAB) Programme
💡 Biosphere Reserve = A Graduated Hospital Ward for the Entire Ecosystem
Unlike a National Park (ICU — no human entry) or a Wildlife Sanctuary (general ward — limited activity), a Biosphere Reserve is like a full residential health campus. People live and work inside it. The innermost zone is the ICU (Core — no disturbance). The middle zone is the treatment zone (Buffer — controlled research/tourism). The outer zone is where residents go about daily life under careful guidance (Transition — human settlements, sustainable farming, traditional practices). The philosophy: “People are not separate from nature — conservation works best when local communities are partners, not obstacles.”
- Launched: 1971 by UNESCO | An intergovernmental scientific programme
- Objective: “To establish a scientific basis for the improvement of relationships between people and their environments” | Promotes conservation of biodiversity + sustainable use of natural resources + improvement of human well-being
- World Network of Biosphere Reserves (WNBR): 785 sites in 142 countries as of 2025 — the 5th World Congress of Biosphere Reserves (September 2025, Hangzhou, China) added 26 new sites (highest number in 20 years)
- Three functions of a BR (key for UPSC):
- Conservation: Protecting biodiversity and cultural diversity
- Development: Promoting economic and social development that is socioculturally and ecologically sustainable
- Logistic support: Supporting demonstration projects, environmental education, research and monitoring
- Designation process: Country nominates → UNESCO’s International Coordinating Council (ICC-MAB) reviews → UNESCO recognizes | National BRs can exist without UNESCO recognition (India has 18 national BRs, 13 UNESCO-recognized)
- India’s BR scheme: Government of India launched the Biosphere Reserve scheme in 1986 under the UNESCO MAB Programme | India is a signatory to the MAB landscape approach
- Funding in India: 90:10 Central:State ratio for NE Region States + 3 Himalayan states | 60:40 for other states | Management Action Plans prepared by State Government and approved by Central MAB Committee
- Difference from Protected Area: BRs are UNESCO designations — NOT legal categories under India’s WPA 1972. A BR can overlap with NPs, WLS, Tiger Reserves, Ramsar Sites — same geographical area can have multiple designations simultaneously. Example: Manas is simultaneously UNESCO WHC + Tiger Reserve + Biosphere Reserve + National Park + Ramsar Site.
- 50th anniversary: 2025 marks the 50th anniversary of UNESCO’s MAB Programme — celebrated at 5th World Congress of Biosphere Reserves, Hangzhou, China (September 2025)
The Three-Zone Model — Structure of a Biosphere Reserve
🔵 CORE ZONE — Inviolate Nucleus
Strictly protected | Legally corresponds to a National Park or Sanctuary (under WPA 1972) | Minimal human disturbance | Scientific monitoring permitted | No extraction of resources | Contains most sensitive biodiversity | Only research with special permits | Example: In Nilgiri BR, the core = Silent Valley NP + Mudumalai NP + other NPs
🟣 BUFFER ZONE — Controlled Use Area
Surrounds the core | Scientific research, education, eco-tourism, low-impact activities allowed | No permanent settlements in most cases | Acts as a transition between the strict core and human-inhabited transition zone | Must not impair core zone conservation | Corresponds to Wildlife Sanctuaries in most cases
⬜ TRANSITION ZONE (Cooperation Zone)
Outermost zone | Human settlements, traditional use of resources, sustainable agriculture, eco-friendly tourism, fishing allowed | Local communities live here | Demonstrates how human activities and conservation can coexist | Where indigenous/traditional knowledge is practiced | Also called the “zone of cooperation” — communities are active partners
- BR is NOT a legal category: Unlike National Parks or Wildlife Sanctuaries, a Biosphere Reserve is NOT declared under any specific section of the WPA 1972. It is a UNESCO/MoEFCC administrative designation overlaid on existing PAs.
- Core zone ≈ National Park/Sanctuary: The core of a BR usually corresponds to an existing NP or WLS with full legal protection. E.g., Nanda Devi NP forms the core of Nanda Devi BR.
- BRs are always larger than NPs: Because they include the buffer and transition zones around the existing NP/WLS. The BR encompasses much more land than the NP at its core.
- Multiple overlapping designations: Sundarbans = NP + Tiger Reserve + BR + UNESCO WHC + Ramsar Site — all simultaneously. Each designation adds different conservation obligations and funding streams.
- NP → cannot have human habitation: But the same area can be part of a BR’s transition zone where communities live. This is how BRs incorporate human wellbeing more explicitly.
Complete List — All 18 Biosphere Reserves of India
| # | Biosphere Reserve | State(s) | Yr Notified | UNESCO Year | Ecosystem / Key Species |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Nilgiri BR ★ | TN, KA, KL | 1986 | 2000 ✓ | First BR + First UNESCO | Lion-tailed Macaque, Nilgiri Tahr, Tiger, Elephant, Neelakurinji | Includes Silent Valley NP, Mudumalai, Nagarhole, Bandipur, Aralam, Wayanad, Mukurthi NPs |
| 2 | Nanda Devi BR | Uttarakhand | 1988 | 2004 ✓ | Snow Leopard, Himalayan Brown Bear, Musk Deer, Alpine flora | Core = Nanda Devi NP (UNESCO WHC 1988) + Valley of Flowers NP (UNESCO WHC 2005) | High Himalayan ecosystem |
| 3 | Nokrek BR | Meghalaya | 1988 | 2009 ✓ | Red Panda, Hoolock Gibbon, Leopard, Asian Elephant | Wild citrus centre — origin of many citrus varieties | Dense tropical forest in Garo Hills |
| 4 | Manas BR | Assam | 1989 | 2001 ✓ | Pygmy Hog (CR), Golden Langur (EN), Wild Water Buffalo, Tiger | Core = Manas NP (UNESCO WHC) | Trans-boundary with Bhutan’s Royal Manas NP |
| 5 | Sundarbans BR | West Bengal | 1989 | 2001 ✓ | Royal Bengal Tiger (salt-adapted), Irrawaddy Dolphin, Saltwater Crocodile, Gangetic Dolphin | Core = Sundarbans NP (UNESCO WHC 1987) | World’s largest mangrove | Also Ramsar Site |
| 6 | Gulf of Mannar BR | Tamil Nadu | 1989 | 2001 ✓ | First marine BR in India | Dugong (VU), Olive Ridley Turtle, Sea Horse, Corals (21 islands) | Also India’s first marine Biosphere Reserve to get UNESCO recognition | Seagrass beds, coral reefs, mangroves, salt marshes |
| 7 | Great Nicobar BR | Andaman & Nicobar | 1989 | 2013 ✓ | Leatherback Sea Turtle (VU), Giant Robber Crab (world’s largest land invertebrate), Nicobar Megapode (EN), Nicobar Scrubfowl | Campbell Bay NP + Galathea NP = core | Note: under threat from Great Nicobar Holistic Development Project 2024-25 |
| 8 | Similipal BR | Odisha | 1994 | 2009 ✓ | Tiger, Elephant, Gaur, Orchids (over 100 species), Waterfalls (Joranda, Barehipani) | Core = Similipal NP + TR | 107th NP of India (April 2025) | Mayurbhanj district |
| 9 | Dibru-Saikhowa BR | Assam | 1986 | Not UNESCO | Smallest BR in India | Feral Horses (wild descendants of escaped horses), Bengal Tiger, Clouded Leopard, Gangetic Dolphin | Brahmaputra floodplain | Core = Dibru-Saikhowa NP |
| 10 | Dehang-Debang BR | Arunachal Pradesh | 1998 | Not UNESCO | Takin (VU), Red Panda (EN), Snow Leopard | Core includes Mouling NP + Dibang WLS | Altitudinal range 750–3,000m | Highest point: Mouling Peak |
| 11 | Pachmarhi BR | Madhya Pradesh | 1999 | 2009 ✓ | Only single-state BR in a major state | Indian Giant Squirrel, Indian Wild Dog (Dhole), Tiger, Leopard | Core = Bori, Satpura, and Pachmarhi NP/WLS | Satpura range | MP’s “Queen of Satpura” |
| 12 | Khangchendzonga BR | Sikkim | 2000 | 2018 ✓ | Red Panda (EN), Snow Leopard, Musk Deer (EN), Argali (Tibetan Sheep) | Core = Khangchendzonga NP (UNESCO MIXED WHC 2016 — India’s only mixed site) | Includes world’s 3rd highest peak (8,586m) | Lepcha+Bhutia sacred traditions |
| 13 | Agasthyamala BR | KL, TN | 2001 | 2016 ✓ | Smallest BR (some sources) | Neelakurinji, Elephant, Tiger, Lion-tailed Macaque, Nilgiri Langur | Western Ghats southern end | Rich in medicinal plants | Shendurney WLS + Kalakad-Mundanthurai TR in core |
| 14 | Achanakmar-Amarkantak BR | MP, CG | 2005 | 2012 ✓ | Wild Dog (Dhole), Sloth Bear, Tiger | Trans-state BR (MP + Chhattisgarh) | Source of rivers: Narmada and Son | Unique — rivers flow to both Arabian Sea (Narmada) and Bay of Bengal (Son) from this BR |
| 15 | Kanha-Pench BR | Madhya Pradesh | 1979 | Not UNESCO | Tiger, Hard-ground Barasingha (Kanha’s specialty), Gaur | Core = Kanha TR + Pench TR | “Jungle Book” landscape | MP’s most iconic tiger landscape |
| 16 | Seshachalam Hills BR | Andhra Pradesh | 2010 | Not UNESCO | Slender Loris (EN), Red Sanders, Chiru (Tibetan Antelope, occasional), Sloth Bear | Eastern Ghats | Red Sanders — critically important commercially + ecologically |
| 17 | Panna BR | Madhya Pradesh | 2011 | Not UNESCO | Tiger (reintroduction success — from 0 to 64 tigers), Indian Vulture, Gharial | Core = Panna TR | Ken River | MP’s tiger reintroduction model |
| 18 | Cold Desert BR | Himachal Pradesh | 2009 | 2025 ✓ (Latest) | Snow Leopard, Himalayan Ibex, Blue Sheep (800+), Tibetan Wolf, Golden Eagle | Pin Valley NP + Kibber WLS + Chandratal + Sarchu | 7,770 sq km, 3,300–6,600m altitude | India’s 13th UNESCO BR | 13th UNESCO BR — Sept 27, 2025 |
- Nilgiri (2000) | Sundarbans (2001) | Gulf of Mannar (2001) | Manas (2001) | Similipal (2009) | Pachmarhi (2009) | Nokrek (2009) | Achanakmar-Amarkantak (2012) | Great Nicobar (2013) | Agasthyamala (2016) | Khangchendzonga (2018) | Nanda Devi (2004) = 12 UNESCO BRs before 2025
- + Cold Desert (September 27, 2025) = 13th UNESCO BR ← latest current affairs
- NOT UNESCO-recognized (5 national BRs): Dibru-Saikhowa (Assam) | Dehang-Debang (Arunachal Pradesh) | Kanha-Pench (MP) | Seshachalam Hills (AP) | Panna (MP)
Cold Desert Biosphere Reserve — India’s 13th UNESCO BR
- Event: UNESCO officially designated the Cold Desert BR during the 37th Session of UNESCO’s International Coordinating Council — Man and the Biosphere (ICC-MAB), held September 27, 2025 at the 5th World Congress of Biosphere Reserves in Hangzhou, China
- Status: India’s 13th UNESCO-recognized Biosphere Reserve (nationally designated in 2009, UNESCO-recognized 2025)
- Location: Lahaul-Spiti district, Himachal Pradesh | Trans-Himalayan biogeographic province (not the Himalayas proper — the cold desert BEHIND the Himalayan ranges)
- Area: 7,770 sq km | Altitude range: 3,300m to 6,600m — one of the highest BRs in the world
- Key constituents: Pin Valley National Park + Kibber Wildlife Sanctuary + Chandratal Wetland + Sarchu Plains | Core: 2,665 sq km | Buffer: 3,977 sq km | Transition: 1,128 sq km
- Significance: India’s FIRST high-altitude cold desert biosphere reserve | One of the coldest and driest ecosystems in UNESCO’s WNBR | Windswept plateaus, glacial valleys, alpine lakes, rugged high-altitude desert
- Flora: 732 species of vascular plants | 30 endemic species | 157 near-endemic species of Indian Himalayas | 47 medicinal plants (used in Sowa Rigpa/Amchi — traditional Tibetan healing system)
- Fauna (Key species): Snow Leopard (flagship) | Himalayan Wolf | Himalayan Ibex | Blue Sheep (bharal — 800+ in Spiti) | Tibetan Antelope | Golden Eagle | Himalayan Snowcock | Bearded Vulture (Lammergeier)
- Communities: ~12,000 people | Practice: Yak and goat herding | Barley and pea farming | Tibetan herbal medicine (Amchi system) | Buddhist monastic governance | Culture deeply intertwined with the fragile ecosystem
- Global context: 2025 saw 26 new BRs added globally — the highest number in 20 years. Total WNBR: 785 sites in 142 countries. Also: São Tomé and Príncipe became first country to designate its ENTIRE territory as a biosphere reserve.
- 50th Anniversary: The designation coincides with the 50th anniversary of the UNESCO MAB Programme, celebrating 50 years of the global BR network.
Key Biosphere Reserve Profiles — Most UPSC-Tested
- Largest BR: Great Rann of Kutch BR (Gujarat) — 12,454 sq km | Unique desert + seasonal wetland ecosystem | Indian Wild Ass sole habitat | Part of Rann of Kutch complex
- Smallest BR: Dibru-Saikhowa BR (Assam) | Some sources say Agasthyamala (KL+TN) is smallest | Context-dependent, know both for UPSC
- First BR India: Nilgiri BR (1986) — also first UNESCO-recognized BR from India (2000)
- First marine BR: Gulf of Mannar BR (Tamil Nadu, 1989)
- Trans-boundary BR: Manas BR (India) ↔ Royal Manas NP (Bhutan) | Also: Khangchendzonga has trans-boundary elements with Nepal
- Only single large-state BR: Pachmarhi BR (MP only) — unique in being entirely within one major mainland state
- BR with most overlapping designations: Sundarbans BR = NP + TR + BR + UNESCO WHC + Ramsar (5 designations!)
- BR with India’s only Mixed UNESCO WHC: Khangchendzonga BR (Sikkim)
- BR under threat from development (2024-25): Great Nicobar BR — Great Nicobar Holistic Development Project proposes transshipment port, airport, township. NGT and SC scrutiny ongoing. Leatherback turtle nesting beaches threatened.
Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve
Sundarbans Biosphere Reserve
Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve
Great Nicobar Biosphere Reserve
Manas Biosphere Reserve
Gulf of Mannar Biosphere Reserve
UNESCO World Heritage Sites — Natural & Mixed
- Total WHC (as of 2026): 44 sites (36 Cultural + 7 Natural + 1 Mixed) | India ranks 6th globally in number of WHC sites
- First WHC (1983): Ajanta Caves + Ellora Caves + Agra Fort + Taj Mahal (all inscribed together in 1983)
- Most recent WHC (2025): Maratha Military Landscapes of India (47th session, Paris, July 2025) — inscribed as a cultural WHC
- First cultural WHC from NE India (2024): Moidams — Charaideo Mound Burial System, Assam (Ahom dynasty royal burial mounds, 700-year tradition)
- Only Mixed WHC: Khangchendzonga NP, Sikkim (2016) — criteria: iii, vi, vii, x — natural (Eastern Himalayan biodiversity) + cultural (Lepcha + Bhutia sacred traditions linked to Mt Khangchendzonga)
- India in 2025: 6 new sites added to India’s Tentative List in 2025, bringing total tentative list to 62. Key additions: Kanger Valley NP (CG), Mudumal Megalithic Menhirs (Telangana), Ashokan Edict Sites, Chausath Yogini Temples.
- WHC sites that were in “danger”: Manas WLS (1992–2011, due to Bodo insurgency + poaching) | Hampi monuments (1999–2006, development threat). Both successfully restored.
Kaziranga National Park
Manas Wildlife Sanctuary
Keoladeo National Park
Sundarbans National Park
Nanda Devi & Valley of Flowers
Western Ghats
Great Himalayan National Park
Khangchendzonga National Park
- 2025 Most recent: Maratha Military Landscapes of India — Cultural WHC inscribed at 47th session (Paris, July 2025). Network of forts across Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu associated with Maratha Empire. Includes 12 significant forts (Raigad, Shivneri, Rajgad, etc.).
- 2024: Moidams — Charaideo Mound Burial System (Assam) — Cultural WHC. First cultural WHC from Northeast India. 700-year tradition of royal burial mounds of the Ahom dynasty (Tai-Ahom funerary traditions). Over 90 mounds. Assam was already home to 2 Natural WHC sites (Kaziranga and Manas).
- Total: India has 44 WHC sites as of 2026 (36 Cultural + 7 Natural + 1 Mixed)
- 2025 UNESCO Tentative List additions: 6 new sites added — Kanger Valley NP (Chhattisgarh), Mudumal Megalithic Menhirs (Telangana), Ashokan Edict Sites (multiple states), Chausath Yogini Temples (multiple states) + 2 more — bringing India’s total tentative list to 62 sites.
- Common UPSC trap: India ranks 6th globally in WHC sites — NOT first or second. China (57 sites) has more. Italy and Germany also outrank India.
⭐ Biosphere Reserves + Natural WHC — Complete Cheat Sheet
- UNESCO MAB Programme: Launched 1971 | “Living laboratories for sustainable development” | 3 functions: Conservation + Development + Logistic support | India: 18 BRs, 13 UNESCO-recognized (as of Sept 2025) | India launched BR scheme in 1986
- 3-Zone model: Core (inviolate, = NP/WLS legally) → Buffer (research, eco-tourism, controlled) → Transition/Cooperation (human settlements, sustainable activities, traditional practices)
- Cold Desert BR = India’s 13th UNESCO BR: Sept 27, 2025 | 5th WCBR Hangzhou China | Lahaul-Spiti, Himachal Pradesh | 7,770 sq km, 3,300-6,600m | Includes Pin Valley NP + Kibber WLS + Chandratal + Sarchu | Snow Leopard + blue sheep 800+ + Himalayan ibex + Tibetan wolf | 732 vascular plants (30 endemic) | 47 medicinal plants (Sowa Rigpa/Amchi) | ~12,000 people | India’s first high-altitude cold desert BR
- First BR India: Nilgiri BR (1986, TN+KA+KL) — also first UNESCO-recognized (2000) | Neelakurinji blooms every 12 years
- First marine BR: Gulf of Mannar (TN, 1989) — Dugong only India habitat, coral reefs, 21 islands
- Largest BR: Great Rann of Kutch (Gujarat, 12,454 sq km) | Smallest: Dibru-Saikhowa (Assam) / Agasthyamala (KL+TN, by some sources)
- 5 UNESCO BRs NOT recognized by UNESCO: Dibru-Saikhowa (AS) | Dehang-Debang (AR) | Kanha-Pench (MP) | Seshachalam Hills (AP) | Panna (MP)
- Trans-boundary BRs: Manas (India) ↔ Royal Manas NP (Bhutan) | Khangchendzonga (Sikkim) with Nepal elements
- Most overlapping designations: Sundarbans = BR + NP + TR + UNESCO WHC + Ramsar (5!) | Manas = BR + NP + TR + UNESCO WHC + Ramsar (5!)
- Achanakmar-Amarkantak BR: MP + Chhattisgarh | Source of BOTH Narmada (→ Arabian Sea) AND Son River (→ Bay of Bengal) — unique geographical significance
- Pachmarhi BR: MP only (single major state) | Satpura range | Tiger, Dhole, Indian Giant Squirrel
- Great Nicobar BR: UNESCO 2013 | Leatherback turtle + Giant Robber Crab + Nicobar Megapode | Development threat 2024-25 (Holistic Development Project) | Shompen community
- India’s 44 UNESCO WHC: 36 Cultural + 7 Natural + 1 Mixed | First 1983 (Ajanta, Ellora, Agra Fort, Taj Mahal) | Latest 2025 = Maratha Military Landscapes (Cultural) | India ranks 6th globally
- 7 Natural WHC: Kaziranga (1985, AS) | Manas (1985, AS, in danger 1992-2011) | Keoladeo (1985, RJ) | Sundarbans (1987, WB) | Nanda Devi+Valley of Flowers (1988+2005, UK) | Western Ghats (2012, serial, 6 states) | Great Himalayan NP (2014, HP)
- 1 Mixed WHC = Khangchendzonga (2016, Sikkim): India’s ONLY mixed WHC | Natural (Snow Leopard, Red Panda, 3rd highest peak 8,586m) + Cultural (Lepcha + Bhutia sacred traditions) | Also core of Khangchendzonga BR (UNESCO 2018)
- 2024 WHC Moidams (Assam): First cultural WHC from NE India | Ahom dynasty royal burial mounds | 700-year Tai-Ahom funerary tradition
- UNESCO TRAP questions: Valley of Flowers WHC was EXTENDED in 2005 (NOT first inscribed 2005 — it was part of Nanda Devi WHC extended) | Great Himalayan NP (2014) is in HP (Kullu), NOT Uttarakhand (common confusion) | Nanda Devi NP is in UK | Manas was in “danger” list — NOT currently


