Crocodile Conservation India — Gharial to Saltwater UPSC Notes

Crocodile Conservation India | Gharial | Mugger | Saltwater | MCBT | UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS Bangalore
UPSC Prelims + Mains · Wildlife Conservation · 50 Years of Croc Conservation (1975–2025)

Conservation of India’s
Crocodile Species 🐊

3 Species · Indian Crocodile Conservation Project (1975) · Madras Crocodile Bank Trust · Gharial · Mugger · Saltwater Crocodile — with current affairs 2024

1

India’s Three Crocodilian Species — The Big Picture

From near-extinction in 1970s to recovery — one of India’s greatest conservation stories

💡 Think of India’s Three Crocodilians as Three Different Patients in Hospital

Gharial = ICU patient — Critically Endangered; population crashed 98% in 60 years; still fighting for survival in a handful of rivers. Mugger = Ward patient — Vulnerable; recovering but needs attention; now starting to appear in places outside their range (conflict!). Saltwater = Discharged patient — Least Concern globally; thriving in Bhitarkanika and Andamans; now so numerous the problem is human-crocodile conflict! Three species, three completely different conservation stories — all in India.

Why India is Special for Crocodile Conservation
  • India is one of very few countries in the world to have three crocodilian species in the wild
  • Odisha is the only state where all three species are found together — and its Kendrapara district is the only district in India with all three species
  • India’s Crocodile Conservation Project (1975) is celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2024–25 — a landmark achievement
  • India has gone from near-extinction of all three species in 1970s to significant population recovery for two species (mugger, saltwater) — though gharial remains critically endangered
  • World Crocodile Day: June 17 — observed annually
3

Crocodile species in India

1975

Conservation Project launched

7,000+

Crocodiles restocked since 1975

1,811

Saltwater crocs in Bhitarkanika (2024)

5,000+

Bred by MCBT since 1976

June 17

World Crocodile Day

2

India’s Three Crocodilian Species — In Detail

Learn the differences — UPSC loves asking about gharial vs mugger vs saltwater
Gharial - Gavialis gangeticus
🔴 Critically Endangered (CR)

Gharial

Gavialis gangeticus · “Gavial” · Fish-eating Crocodile
  • Name origin: Named for the bulbous knob on the male’s snout — resembles a ghara (earthen pot in Hindi). Only species with visible external difference between sexes.
  • Snout: LONGEST and NARROWEST snout of any crocodilian — 110 sharp interlocking teeth. Perfect for catching slippery fish. Cannot eat large prey.
  • Diet: Exclusively fish (piscivorous) — the most specialized feeder among crocodilians.
  • Habitat: Deep, fast-flowing rivers with sandy riverbanks for basking and nesting. Most aquatic of all crocodilians — even adults rarely leave water (except to bask).
  • Where: Only in Chambal River (MP/UP/Rajasthan), Girwa River (Katarniaghat WLS, UP), Gandak River (Bihar-Nepal border). Previously: Ganga, Yamuna, Kosi, Indus — now locally extinct in all except a few.
  • Size: World’s LONGEST crocodilian — males up to 6+ metres. Largest specimen found: 19.5 ft (5.9m) in Katarniaghat WLS.
  • Legal protection: WPA Schedule I · CITES Appendix I
  • Population: ~650-800 mature individuals globally (2024). WII Ganga-basin survey 2026 recorded 3,000+ total (including sub-adults).
  • Unique feature: Indicator of clean river water — their presence signals a healthy river ecosystem. Also very shy — will flee at slightest disturbance.
  • Crisis 2007: About a quarter of wild gharials died mysteriously — likely secondary chemical poisoning from goonch fish (suspected) or industrial effluents in Chambal.
Mugger Crocodile
🟠 Vulnerable (VU)

Mugger / Marsh Crocodile

Crocodylus palustris · Most common Indian crocodile
  • Name: “Mugger” from Hindi word for crocodile. Also called Marsh Crocodile or Broad-snouted Crocodile.
  • Snout: BROADEST snout of any Crocodylus species — distinguishes it from gharial (very narrow) and saltwater (medium pointed).
  • Diet: Generalist — fish, amphibians, birds, mammals, carrion. Far less specialised than gharial.
  • Habitat: Most versatile Indian crocodile — rivers, lakes, marshes, irrigation canals, coastal saltwater lagoons, estuaries. Even digs burrows when temperature drops below 5°C!
  • Range: Most widespread Indian crocodilian — 10+ states. Restricted to the Indian subcontinent. Now extinct in Myanmar and Bhutan.
  • Size: Medium — up to 4–5 m.
  • Legal protection: WPA Schedule I · CITES Appendix I
  • Population: ~8,000–10,000 in India (the largest of three).
  • Interesting fact: Muggers take overland treks — they walk overland for considerable distances, and are frequently found in human-dominated landscapes. This leads to conflict.
  • Conflict: Vadodara (Gujarat), Kota (Rajasthan), and parts of Chhattisgarh are mugger-human conflict hotspots. Gujarat has 1,500+ muggers!
Saltwater Crocodile
Least Concern (LC) globally

Saltwater / Estuarine Crocodile

Crocodylus porosus · World’s largest reptile
  • Record: LARGEST CROCODILIAN species — and the LARGEST LIVING REPTILE on Earth. Males up to 7 m and 1,000+ kg. Largest specimen found in India: 7 m, Odisha.
  • Habitat: Estuaries, mangroves, coastal waters, tidal rivers. Also found in open sea — can swim thousands of km across oceans!
  • Diet: Apex predator — can take almost anything. Fish, birds, mammals, humans. Man-eater reputation.
  • Where in India: Bhitarkanika NP (Odisha) — largest Indian population. Sundarbans (West Bengal). Andaman & Nicobar Islands. Small numbers in coastal Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu.
  • Legal protection: WPA Schedule I · CITES Appendix II
  • Population in India: ~2,500. Bhitarkanika: 1,811 (2024 census — marginal rise).
  • Bhitarkanika: From just 96 (1976) to 1,811 (2024) — a remarkable recovery due to the Conservation Project.
  • Conflict: Bhitarkanika‘s population is now above carrying capacity — crocodiles are entering human settlements. 57 people attacked in and around Bhitarkanika in 15 years.
  • Local name: Called “Baula” in Odia language.
Quick Comparison — All 3 Species at a Glance
Feature🔴 Gharial🟠 Mugger✅ Saltwater
Scientific nameGavialis gangeticusCrocodylus palustrisCrocodylus porosus
IUCN StatusCritically Endangered (CR)Vulnerable (VU)Least Concern (LC)
CITESAppendix IAppendix IAppendix II
WPASchedule ISchedule ISchedule I
Snout shapeVERY LONG & NARROW (fish-eating specialist)BROAD (broadest of any Crocodylus)MEDIUM & pointed
DietOnly fish (specialist)Generalist — fish, mammals, birdsApex predator — anything
HabitatFast-flowing deep freshwater riversFreshwater + occasional coastal/estuarine; versatileEstuaries, mangroves, coastal, open sea
India distributionChambal, Girwa, Gandak rivers only10+ states; most widespreadBhitarkanika, Sundarbans, A&N Islands
SizeLargest — up to 6+ m (world’s longest crocodilian)Medium — up to 5 mWorld’s largest reptile — up to 7 m
India population~650–800 mature; 3,000+ total (WII 2026)~8,000–10,000~2,500; Bhitarkanika 1,811 (2024)
Special featureBulbous “ghara” knob on male’s snout; indicator of river health; most aquatic crocDigs burrows; overland trekking; broadest snoutWorld’s largest reptile; can swim oceans; man-eater reputation
Where all 3 foundOnly Odisha has all three species! Kendrapara district = only district in India with all 3.

⭐ Easy Memory — 3 Indian Crocodilians

  • Gharial = G = Ganges rivers = long narrow snout = fish only = CR
  • Mugger = M = Marsh = broadest snout = generalist = VU = most widespread
  • Saltwater = S = Sea + estuaries = largest reptile on Earth = LC
  • Snout width (narrowest to broadest): Gharial → Saltwater → Mugger
  • Only Odisha = all 3 species. Kendrapara district = only district with all 3.
  • Only saltwater is in CITES Appendix II — gharial and mugger are both Appendix I.
3

Gharial — Deep Dive Current Affairs 2024

The most endangered of India’s three crocodiles — story of catastrophic decline and partial recovery
5,000–10,000

Gharial population in 1946

<250

Survived by 2006 (98% decline in 60 years!)

650–800

Mature individuals today (globally)

3,000+

Total population (WII Ganga-basin survey, 2026)

1,255

In Chambal River alone (WTI survey)

4

Rivers where gharial still survives in India

🔴 Current Affairs — Gharial 2024-26
  • WII Ganga-basin Survey (2026): The Wildlife Institute of India conducted a survey covering 7,000 sq km of the Ganga basin, recording over 3,000 gharials — the most comprehensive count ever. This is the total population including young; mature individuals remain ~650-800.
  • Chambal Conservation Reserve: The National Chambal Sanctuary (MP, UP, Rajasthan) is the world’s most important gharial habitat. The Chambal River is protected as a Conservation Reserve along 400+ km.
  • Gandak Conservation Reserve: 140 km of the Gandak River (Bihar) was declared a conservation reserve — directly benefiting gharials.
  • 2007 mass mortality: A mysterious die-off killed ~110 gharials (25% of wild population). Probable cause: secondary poisoning from industrial effluents. Chandoli (Mahanadi) population failed to establish despite reintroduction.
  • Key locations: National Chambal Sanctuary (primary stronghold) · Katarniaghat WLS, UP (Girwa river) · Gandak river, Bihar · Some rivers in Nepal (Chitwan, Bardia NPs)
4

Indian Crocodile Conservation Project (1975) 50th Anniversary 2024-25

India’s landmark multi-species reptile conservation programme — a UNDP/FAO collaboration
🐊

Indian Crocodile Conservation Project (1975)

Government of India + UNDP + FAO · All three species · Head-start rear-and-release method · 50th year 2024-25
  • Launched: 1975 by the Government of India in collaboration with UNDP and FAO
  • Basis: Recommendations by Dr. H.R. Bustard — FAO expert who studied Indian crocodilian populations and designed the conservation programme
  • Sequence: Gharial + Saltwater programme launched in Odisha first (early 1975). Mugger programme launched later. Odisha pioneered the project because all three species were present there.
  • Species covered: All three — Gharial (Gavialis gangeticus), Mugger (Crocodylus palustris), Saltwater (Crocodylus porosus)
  • Core method — Head-start/Rear-and-release: Collect eggs from wild nests → incubate in captivity → rear hatchlings for 1–3 years (when predation risk is much lower) → release into protected areas. Survival rate of head-started crocodiles far exceeds that of wild hatchlings.
  • Scale: Over 7,000 crocodiles restocked4,000 gharials + 1,800 muggers + 1,500 saltwater crocodiles
  • Protected areas created: Within a decade, 12+ wildlife sanctuaries created specifically for crocodile conservation
  • Training institute: Central Crocodile Breeding and Management Training Institute established in Hyderabad — trained personnel from across India
  • Key crocodile breeding centres: Tikarpada (Odisha) — Gharial Research and Conservation Unit (GRACU, est. 1975); Nandankanan (Odisha); Deori (UP); Kukrail (UP); MCBT (Tamil Nadu)
  • 50th Anniversary (2024-25): India celebrated World Crocodile Day 2024 (June 17) as the 50th anniversary. Surveys show encouraging trends — saltwater count at Bhitarkanika reached 1,811 in 2024.
  • Outcome summary: Mugger = successful recovery (~10,000); Saltwater = successful recovery (~2,500); Gharial = partial recovery (still CR, but from <250 to 650+ mature individuals)

🔴 Gharial Recovery

1975: Fewer than 100 wild individuals
Today: ~650-800 mature; 3,000+ total

Still CR. Most concentrated in Chambal. Progress real but fragile.

🟠 Mugger Recovery

1975: Nearly extirpated from much of range
Today: ~8,000–10,000 in India

Strong recovery. Now expanding into human-use areas — causing conflict!

✅ Saltwater Recovery

1974: Only 96 in Bhitarkanika
2024: 1,811 in Bhitarkanika alone

Remarkable success. Population at carrying capacity — now conflict issue.

5

Madras Crocodile Bank Trust (MCBT)

Asia’s first crocodile breeding centre — founded by Romulus Whitaker in 1976
Madras Crocodile Bank Trust
Madras Crocodile Bank Trust (MCBT) — East Coast Road, 40 km south of Chennai, Tamil Nadu · © Wikimedia Commons
🏛️

Madras Crocodile Bank Trust and Centre for Herpetology (MCBT)

Founded: August 26, 1976 · Romulus Whitaker · 40 km south of Chennai · Asia’s first crocodile breeding centre
  • Conceived in 1973 | Established: August 26, 1976 by herpetologist Romulus Whitaker (American-born Indian) and his wife Zai Whitaker, along with conservation partners
  • Location: East Coast Road, Vadanemmeli near Thiruvidandhai, ~40 km south of Chennai (on the way to Mahabalipuram), Tamil Nadu — along the Bay of Bengal coast
  • Asia’s first crocodile breeding centre — established precisely when all three Indian crocodilian species were nearing extinction in the 1970s
  • Legal status: Registered trust + recognized zoo under WPA 1972. Under Central Zoo Authority, MoEFCC. India’s leading institution for herpetofaunal conservation.
  • Scale: 8.5 acres of coastal dune forest. Nearly 2,400 reptiles; 14 crocodile species; 12 turtle species; various snakes. Half a million visitors/year.
  • Achievements: Bred over 5,000 crocodiles since inception. Bred all three Indian species. First successful captive breeding of the Indian Painted Roof Turtle (Batagur kachuga) — 2004. Sends 50% of Red-crowned Roofed Turtle stock to UP Forest Department for wild reintroduction.
  • Expanded to Centre for Herpetology (2003): Now covers snakes, lizards, turtles, frogs — India’s largest reptile zoo.
  • IUCN CSG: Strong ties with IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group (CSG, est. 1971). Romulus Whitaker served as CSG vice-chair. MCBT is affiliated with 47+ institutions including WWF, IUCN, Smithsonian, Marine Conservation Society.
  • Gharial Conservation Alliance (GCA) / Gharial Ecology Project (GEP): MCBT played a key role in forming this alliance (2004 → renamed GEP) — a network of crocodile experts dedicated specifically to gharial conservation. Operates in the National Chambal Sanctuary.
  • Romulus Whitaker’s awards: Padma Shri (2018) · Whitley Award (2005, used to establish Agumbe Rainforest Research Station) · Sanctuary-ABN AMRO Lifetime Service Award (2006)
MCBT’s Three Field Bases
🏝️

Andaman & Nicobar Environmental Team (ANET)

South Andaman Island research centre. Focuses on unique reptile species of A&N Islands — saltwater crocodiles, sea turtles, leatherbacks. Marine and island biodiversity.

🌿

Agumbe Rainforest Research Station (ARRS)

Agumbe, Karnataka — established 2005 using Whitley Award money. Specialises in King Cobra ecology and Western Ghats biodiversity. Agumbe has 11,000mm annual rainfall — one of India’s wettest spots.

🐊

Gharial Ecology Project (GEP)

National Chambal Sanctuary. Joint project with Gharial Conservation Alliance and international experts (Dr. Jeffery Lang, crocodile biologist). Studies gharial ecology, threats, and population monitoring.

💡 Romulus Whitaker — India’s Crocodile Guardian

Born in New York in 1943, Romulus Whitaker came to India as a child and fell in love with reptiles. By the 1970s, when Indian crocodiles were being hunted to extinction for their skins, he conceived the Crocodile Bank as an emergency measure. The concept was simple but brilliant: breed crocodiles in captivity as a safety net, while the government worked on legal protection and wild habitat recovery. The Croc Bank started with just 30 crocodiles. Today it has 2,400+ reptiles and half a million visitors a year. Whitaker also co-founded the Chennai Snake Park, helped the Irula tribal snake-catchers establish a venom-extraction cooperative (to produce antivenom after the 1972 WPA banned snake-skin trade), established the King Cobra research station at Agumbe, and has dedicated his life to making India safe for reptiles — and vice versa. Padma Shri recipient (2018).

6

Threats to India’s Crocodilians

What still threatens them — especially the gharial
⛏️

Sand Mining (Gharial’s #1 threat)

Illegal sand mining destroys gharial nesting beaches on rivers like Chambal and Gandak. Gharials nest on sandy riverbanks — mining destroys their nests and disturbs the narrow viable habitat remaining. Major ongoing problem despite National Green Tribunal orders.

🎣

Fishing Nets

Crocodiles — especially gharials — get entangled in gill nets and drown. Overfishing also reduces prey availability for gharials. The Chambal’s fish stocks are under pressure from commercial fishing.

🏗️

Dam Construction & River Diversion

Dams alter river flow, change water temperature and sediment patterns, and fragment river habitats. Gharials require connected stretches of deep, fast-flowing rivers — dams block this. River flow reduction makes rivers shallower and less suitable.

🏭

River Pollution & Industrial Effluents

The 2007 gharial mass die-off (110 deaths) was likely linked to industrial pollution. Agricultural runoff (pesticides, fertilizers), industrial effluents, and sewage poison riverine food chains — especially fish, which gharials depend on exclusively.

⚔️

Human-Wildlife Conflict

Saltwater crocodiles in Bhitarkanika and Andamans increasingly attack fishermen and villagers as their population grows beyond carrying capacity. Muggers are found in human-dominated landscapes and attack people and livestock. Retaliatory killing follows attacks.

🔫

Poaching for Body Parts

Crocodile skin for leather goods (historically major), eggs for consumption, fat for traditional medicine. Poaching reduced dramatically after WPA 1972 protection, but continues illegally. Gharials also killed incidentally in fishing operations.

7

Other Conservation Efforts & Key Sanctuaries

Protected areas and institutions making a difference
Site / InitiativeSpeciesStateKey Feature
National Chambal SanctuaryGharial (primary), MuggerMP / UP / RajasthanWorld’s most important gharial habitat; 400+ km river protected; also Red-crowned Roofed Turtle, Gangetic Dolphin
Katarniaghat WLSGharial (Girwa river)Uttar PradeshSecondary gharial stronghold; world’s largest gharial found here (5.9m)
Gandak River Conservation ReserveGharialBihar140 km declared conservation reserve; trans-boundary with Nepal (Chitwan NP gharials)
Bhitarkanika NPSaltwater (primary), Mugger, GharialOdishaLargest saltwater croc population in India (1,811 in 2024). All 3 species. Kendrapara district = India’s only all-3-species district
SundarbansSaltwaterWest BengalSaltwater crocodiles in world’s largest mangrove; UNESCO WHS + Tiger Reserve + Ramsar
Andaman & Nicobar IslandsSaltwaterUTSignificant saltwater population; ANET (MCBT field base) monitors
Satkosia Gorge WLS, TikarpadaGharial, MuggerOdishaGRACU (Gharial Research & Conservation Unit) est. 1975; Mahanadi river system; 64+ muggers confirmed
Madras Crocodile Bank TrustAll 3 speciesTamil NaduAsia’s first croc breeding centre; 5,000+ bred; 40 km south of Chennai; Romulus Whitaker
Nandankanan Biological ParkGharial, MuggerOdishaSource of captive-bred gharials for Mahanadi river reintroduction
Kukrail Gharial SanctuaryGharialUttar Pradesh (Lucknow)Breeding and rearing centre near Lucknow; releases gharials into Ghaghara river
IUCN SSC Crocodile Specialist Group (CSG)All crocodilians globallyInternationalEst. 1971; global network of 300+ experts; 23 crocodilian species; advises IUCN and governments

⭐ Indian Crocodile Conservation — Complete UPSC Cheat Sheet

  • 3 species: Gharial (CR) · Mugger (VU) · Saltwater (LC globally)
  • All 3 in one state: Odisha | Kendrapara district = only district with all 3
  • Gharial name: From “ghara” (earthen pot) — male’s bulbous snout knob
  • Gharial rivers: Chambal · Girwa (Katarniaghat) · Gandak · (formerly Ganga, Yamuna, Kosi, Indus)
  • Saltwater = world’s largest reptile | Gharial = world’s longest crocodilian
  • Mugger = broadest snout of any Crocodylus species
  • Conservation Project: 1975 · UNDP + FAO + GoI · Dr. H.R. Bustard recommended
  • 7,000+ restocked: 4,000 gharial + 1,800 mugger + 1,500 saltwater
  • MCBT: Founded 26 August 1976 · Romulus Whitaker · 40 km south Chennai · First croc breeding centre in Asia · 5,000+ bred
  • MCBT field bases: ANET (Andamans) · ARRS (Agumbe, Karnataka) · GEP (Chambal)
  • Romulus Whitaker: Padma Shri 2018 · Whitley Award 2005
  • Bhitarkanika: 96 saltwater crocs (1976) → 1,811 (2024) — massive recovery
  • World Crocodile Day: June 17
  • CSG (Croc Specialist Group): IUCN · est. 1971 · 23 crocodilian species globally
  • Gharial indicator of: Clean river water + healthy river ecosystem

🧪 Practice MCQs — Test Yourself
Practice
Q1. Consider the following pairs — Crocodile Species : IUCN Status : 1. Gharial (Gavialis gangeticus) — Critically Endangered (CR) 2. Mugger Crocodile (Crocodylus palustris) — Vulnerable (VU) 3. Saltwater Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) — Endangered (EN) Which pairs are CORRECTLY matched?
✅ Answer: (b) — 1 and 2 only
1 ✅: Gharial = Critically Endangered (CR). Population declined 98% in 60 years — from 5,000–10,000 (1946) to <250 (2006). Now partially recovered to ~650-800 mature individuals. 2 ✅: Mugger = Vulnerable (VU). Most widespread; ~8,000–10,000 in India. Recovering but under threat. 3 ❌ Wrong: Saltwater Crocodile = Least Concern (LC) globally — NOT Endangered. The global population is stable/increasing, with significant populations in Southeast Asia, Australia, and India. In India specifically, saltwater crocodile has recovered dramatically — from 96 (1976) to 1,811 at Bhitarkanika alone (2024).
Practice
Q2. The Gharial (Gavialis gangeticus) is different from the Mugger (Crocodylus palustris) in which of the following ways? 1. Gharial has a much longer and narrower snout than the Mugger. 2. Gharial is exclusively fish-eating, while Mugger is a generalist feeder. 3. Gharial is more widely distributed across India than the Mugger. 4. Adult male Gharials have a distinctive bulbous knob (ghara) on the snout tip. Select the correct answer:
✅ Answer: (c) — 1, 2 and 4 only
1 ✅: Gharial has the longest and narrowest snout of any crocodilian — perfect for catching fish. Mugger has the broadest snout of any Crocodylus species. 2 ✅: Gharial = exclusively piscivorous (fish only). Cannot eat large prey — teeth and jaw are designed purely for catching slippery fish. Mugger = generalist — eats fish, mammals, birds, carrion. 3 ❌ Wrong: It is the MUGGER that is more widely distributed — found in 10+ states across India. The GHARIAL has the most restricted range — only Chambal, Girwa, and Gandak rivers now. 4 ✅: The bulbous “ghara” knob on the male gharial’s snout tip is its most distinctive feature — used for visual signalling and producing sounds. It is the only crocodilian with visible external dimorphism.
Practice
Q3. Consider the following about the Madras Crocodile Bank Trust (MCBT): 1. It was established in 1976 by Romulus Whitaker. 2. It is the first crocodile breeding centre in Asia. 3. It is located 40 km south of Chennai on the East Coast Road. 4. It is affiliated with UNESCO and operates independently of Indian law. Which of the above are CORRECT?
✅ Answer: (c) — 1, 2 and 3 only
1 ✅: Established August 26, 1976 by Romulus Whitaker and his wife Zai Whitaker. 2 ✅: First crocodile breeding centre in Asia — established at a time when all three Indian crocodilians were nearing extinction. 3 ✅: Located on East Coast Road, Vadanemmeli, ~40 km south of Chennai (on the way to Mahabalipuram), Tamil Nadu. 4 ❌ Wrong: MCBT is NOT affiliated with UNESCO and does NOT operate independently of Indian law. It is a registered trust and recognized zoo under the Wildlife Protection Act 1972, under the purview of the Central Zoo Authority, MoEFCC. It is affiliated with IUCN, WWF, Smithsonian, and Marine Conservation Society — but operates within Indian legal framework.
Current Affairs
Q4. India’s Crocodile Conservation Project was launched in 1975. Which of the following is CORRECT about it?
✅ Answer: (c)
The Indian Crocodile Conservation Project (1975) was a collaboration between the Government of India + UNDP + FAO. It covers all THREE Indian crocodilian species — Gharial, Mugger, and Saltwater (though Odisha pioneered the gharial + saltwater programme first). It used a combination of approaches: captive breeding + rear-and-release (ex situ elements) + protected area creation + habitat management (in situ elements). Over 7,000 crocodiles were restocked. The project was based on recommendations by Dr. H.R. Bustard (FAO expert). The 50th anniversary was in 2024-25. The project is associated with India’s broader UNDP-assisted wildlife conservation initiatives of the 1970s.
Practice
Q5. The Saltwater Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) in India is found in which of the following? 1. Bhitarkanika National Park, Odisha 2. Sundarbans, West Bengal 3. National Chambal Sanctuary, Madhya Pradesh 4. Andaman and Nicobar Islands Select the correct answer:
✅ Answer: (c) — 1, 2 and 4 only
Saltwater crocodiles require coastal/estuarine/marine habitats: 1 ✅ Bhitarkanika NP (Odisha): India’s largest saltwater croc population — 1,811 (2024). Mangrove ecosystem. 2 ✅ Sundarbans (West Bengal): World’s largest mangrove — saltwater crocodiles coexist with Bengal Tigers here. 3 ❌ Wrong: National Chambal Sanctuary is a FRESHWATER river sanctuary in landlocked MP/UP/Rajasthan — home to GHARIALS, not saltwater crocodiles. Saltwater crocodiles cannot survive in freshwater inland rivers. 4 ✅ Andaman & Nicobar Islands: Significant saltwater crocodile population in coastal areas. MCBT runs its ANET field base here to monitor them.
Practice
Q6. Which state in India is the ONLY one to have wild populations of all three crocodile species?
✅ Answer: (c) Odisha
Odisha is the only state where all three Indian crocodilian species are found in the wild: (1) Saltwater Crocodile — primarily in Bhitarkanika NP (Kendrapara district), India’s largest saltwater croc habitat; (2) Gharial — in the Mahanadi river system (Satkosia Gorge, Tikarpada); (3) Mugger — in Similipal Tiger Reserve and Mahanadi river system. Kendrapara district (home to Bhitarkanika NP) is specifically the only district in India where all three species coexist. This is why Odisha pioneered India’s Crocodile Conservation Project in early 1975 — it was the state with the most at stake. West Bengal has muggers + saltwater (Sundarbans) but not gharials in the wild. Assam has muggers predominantly.
📜 UPSC Prelims PYQs — Official Past Questions
PYQUPSC 2019
With reference to Indian Gharial (Gavialis gangeticus), which of the following statements is/are correct? 1. It is a Critically Endangered species. 2. It feeds almost entirely on fish. 3. It is found in rivers that drain into the Bay of Bengal. Select the correct answer:
✅ Official Answer: (c) 1 and 2 only
1 ✅: Gharial = Critically Endangered (CR) — population declined 98% in 60 years. Currently ~650-800 mature individuals globally. 2 ✅: Gharial feeds almost entirely on fish — its long, narrow snout with interlocking teeth is specially adapted for this. It cannot eat large prey. Truly piscivorous. 3 ❌ Wrong: This is the key trap. Gharial rivers do NOT drain into the Bay of Bengal (at least not their primary habitat). The Chambal (primary stronghold) drains into the Yamuna → Ganga → Bay of Bengal via the Ganga basin. However, UPSC’s answer was (c) — suggesting the question was asking about the rivers draining specifically to BoB vs those draining to Arabian Sea. The Chambal-Yamuna-Ganga system does drain to BoB but the gharial also inhabits rivers that don’t directly drain there. Historically gharials were also in the Indus basin rivers — which drain to the Arabian Sea. Statement 3 overgeneralizes.
PYQUPSC 2015
Which one of the following is the largest crocodilian in terms of length?
✅ Official Answer: (d) Saltwater Crocodile
The Saltwater Crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) is the world’s largest reptile AND the largest living crocodilian in terms of mass and length. Males can reach 7 metres and weigh over 1,000 kg. While the Gharial is the LONGEST crocodilian on record (males up to 6+ m, but very slender — lightweight), the Saltwater Crocodile is the LARGEST in terms of overall body size (length × girth). UPSC specifically asks “largest” — which refers to the Saltwater Crocodile. The Gharial may be the LONGEST but it is a slender, lightweight fish-eater — the Saltwater croc is massive in every dimension.
PYQUPSC 2020
With reference to the National Chambal Sanctuary, consider the following statements: 1. This Sanctuary is a part of a protected area spread across the three States. 2. One can find the Mugger Crocodile and Gharial in this Sanctuary. 3. This Sanctuary is a notified Ramsar Wetland. Which of the above statements are correct?
✅ Official Answer: (a) 1 and 2 only
1 ✅: National Chambal Sanctuary spans three states — Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, and Rajasthan. Total length ~425 km of the Chambal River. Each state has its own sanctuary notification but collectively it is the National Chambal Sanctuary — a trans-boundary protected area. 2 ✅: Chambal hosts both Gharials (primary stronghold — 1,255+ recorded by WTI) AND Mugger Crocodiles. The Chambal is also home to Gangetic Dolphins, Red-crowned Roofed Turtles, and Indian Skimmer. 3 ❌ Wrong: National Chambal Sanctuary is NOT a notified Ramsar Wetland. It is a Wildlife Sanctuary under WPA 1972. While it has ecological importance, it has not been listed as a Ramsar site. (Note: Many important wetlands in India are Ramsar sites but not all protected areas with water are Ramsar.)
PYQUPSC 2018
With reference to the Bhitarkanika National Park, which of the following statements are correct? 1. It is located in the state of Odisha. 2. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. 3. It is known for the largest population of Saltwater Crocodiles in India. 4. It is a Ramsar Wetland. Select the correct answer:
✅ Official Answer: (c) 1, 3 and 4 only
1 ✅ Odisha: Bhitarkanika NP is in Kendrapara district, Odisha. The only district with all three crocodilian species. 2 ❌ Wrong: Bhitarkanika is NOT a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It is a National Park and a Ramsar Site — but NOT on the World Heritage List. Sundarbans is the UNESCO WHS mangrove nearby (in West Bengal). 3 ✅ Saltwater crocs: Bhitarkanika hosts India’s largest saltwater crocodile population — 1,811 in 2024. From just 96 in 1976. 4 ✅ Ramsar Wetland: Bhitarkanika is a designated Ramsar Site — recognized for its mangrove wetland ecosystem. The surrounding Bhitarkanika Wildlife Sanctuary (larger than the NP core) was designated a Ramsar site.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

The Gharial is perhaps the most evolutionarily unique crocodilian alive. Several things make it extraordinary: (1) Its snout is unlike any other living crocodilian — extraordinarily long and narrow, designed exclusively for catching fish. It cannot bite hard enough to kill large prey. (2) The “ghara” knob — only adult males develop this bulbous fleshy knob on the snout tip. No other crocodilian has this. It is used for visual display during mating and to produce sounds and bubbles underwater. (3) Most aquatic of all crocodilians — unlike muggers and saltwater crocs that regularly walk overland, adult gharials almost never leave water (except to bask and nest on sandbanks). Their legs are too weak to walk properly on land. (4) Clean river indicator — their presence in a river signals clean, unpolluted water with good fish stocks. Their absence signals river degradation. (5) Part of a separate family — Gharials belong to the family Gavialidae, a completely separate evolutionary lineage from true crocodiles (Crocodylidae). They diverged from crocodiles ~65 million years ago — at the time of dinosaur extinction.
The Saltwater Crocodile is listed as Least Concern (LC) globally because the overall global population (across Australia, Southeast Asia, Pacific islands, and South Asia) is large and stable — estimated at 300,000+ individuals worldwide. Australia alone has massive populations. However, in India specifically, the saltwater crocodile was nearly extinct by the 1970s — down to fewer than 100. India’s Crocodile Conservation Project (1975) was essential to prevent local extinction. Despite global LC status, India keeps it under WPA Schedule I (highest protection) — because local/regional conservation needs can differ from global status. Similarly, CITES lists it under Appendix II (not Appendix I) because while global trade needs monitoring, the species isn’t facing global extinction threat. The lesson: species can be LC globally while still needing protection regionally. India’s decision to maintain full protection is prudent — populations could collapse quickly without it (as nearly happened in the 1970s).
The head-start or rear-and-release method is the primary conservation tool of India’s Crocodile Conservation Project. Here’s how it works: (1) Egg collection: Scientists carefully collect eggs from wild crocodilian nests (with permission and minimal disturbance). This is done because natural nest success is very low — many eggs are lost to flooding, predation, temperature changes. (2) Artificial incubation: Eggs are incubated in controlled conditions at conservation centres — temperature, humidity, and turning are managed to maximise hatching success. (3) Captive rearing: Hatchlings are reared in captivity for 1–3 years. During this time they grow from ~30 cm (at hatching) to 1+ metres. This “head start” dramatically improves survival — wild hatchlings face 90%+ mortality from predation (birds, fish, other crocodiles). Captive-reared juveniles have a much better chance. (4) Release: Juveniles are released into protected rivers and water bodies. Rings may be removed or numbers inscribed on scutes for monitoring. Over 7,000 crocodiles were restocked using this method — 4,000 gharials, 1,800 muggers, 1,500 saltwater crocs — turning the 1970s crisis into a 50-year conservation success.
The Chambal River (through MP, UP, and Rajasthan) is the world’s last stronghold for gharials — with the largest remaining wild population. Several features make Chambal exceptional: (1) Relatively unpolluted: Chambal is one of India’s least polluted major rivers — it lacks large industrial cities on its banks and has fewer dams than most rivers. Gharials need clean water with good fish populations. (2) Protected status: The National Chambal Sanctuary protects 425+ km of the river — a rare continuous stretch of protected river habitat. (3) Sandy beaches: Gharials need sandy riverbanks for nesting and basking. Chambal still has intact sandy beaches unlike heavily mined rivers like Ganga and Yamuna. (4) Symbiotic species: Chambal is also home to Gangetic Dolphins (also critically linked to river health), Red-crowned Roofed Turtles, and Indian Skimmers — making it a biodiversity hotspot for riverine species. (5) Gharial numbers: The WTI recorded 1,255 gharials in Chambal alone. The Gandak river (Bihar) also supports a smaller but growing population. Outside India, Nepal’s Chitwan and Bardia NPs have small populations.
Legacy IAS — UPSC Civil Services Coaching, Bangalore  |  Content updated to 2024-25 data. Bhitarkanika saltwater count: 1,811 (2024). WII Ganga-basin gharial survey (2026): 3,000+ total. 50th anniversary of Crocodile Conservation Project (1975–2025). All MCBT facts verified from Wikipedia and official MCBT sources.

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