Elephant Reserves of India — Project Elephant UPSC Notes

Elephant Reserves of India | Project Elephant | DNA Census 2025 | UPSC | Legacy IAS
UPSC Prelims + Mains · Environment · Current Affairs 2024–2025

Elephant Reserves of India 🐘

33 Elephant Reserves · 14 States · 80,778 sq km · Project Elephant 1992 · SAIEE DNA Census 2025: 22,446 elephants (first-ever DNA-based census) · National Heritage Animal since 2010 · 138 corridors · 10 elephant landscapes · Terai ER = 33rd (UP, 2022)

33
Elephant Reserves · 14 states · 80,778 sq km · Project Elephant 1992
22,446
Wild elephants in India (DNA-based SAIEE census, Oct 2025) · 60%+ of global Asian elephants
138
Identified elephant corridors in India — safe migration pathways connecting habitats
500+
Human deaths per year from Human-Elephant Conflict (HEC) — India’s most dangerous wildlife conflict
Karnataka
Leads with 6,013 elephants (2025 census) — highest elephant population among all states
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The Asian Elephant — India’s National Heritage Animal

Elephas maximus indicus · Endangered (IUCN) · Schedule I (WPA 1972) · CITES Appendix I

🐘 Why Elephants Matter — The “Ecological Engineers” of India’s Forests

Elephants are keystone species — their presence or absence fundamentally reshapes entire ecosystems. They break tree branches creating clearings that allow sunlight for grassland plants. They dig waterholes that other animals use. They disperse seeds over vast distances (large seeds that no other animal can disperse). They create trails through dense forests that become pathways for other species. Remove elephants from a forest, and the forest structure changes dramatically. For UPSC: Elephants are also “umbrella species” — protecting elephant habitats protects the entire ecosystem and hundreds of other species living in the same forest.

Asian Elephant — Key Facts for UPSC
  • Scientific name: Elephas maximus (Asian Elephant) | Indian subspecies: Elephas maximus indicus
  • IUCN status: Endangered (EN)
  • WPA protection: Schedule I of Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 — highest level of protection
  • CITES: Appendix I — international commercial trade strictly prohibited
  • National Heritage Animal: Declared on October 22, 2010 (World Elephant Day is August 12)
  • India’s global share: India is home to ~60% of the world’s wild Asian elephants — the highest concentration globally
  • Characteristics: Smaller than African elephant | Rounded back (African has concave back) | Smaller ears | Only some males have tusks (unlike African where both sexes usually have tusks) | Matriarchal herds — led by oldest female (matriarch) | Males live alone or in bachelor groups after maturing | Gestation: 18–22 months (longest among land mammals)
  • Key role: Keystone + umbrella species | Ecological engineer — creates waterholes, clearings, and forest trails | Seed disperser of large-seeded trees | Cultural significance: part of Indian civilization for 4,000+ years (Harappan seals, royal processions, war elephants)
  • Distribution in India: 4 major landscapes: Western Ghats (Karnataka, TN, Kerala), NE India (Assam, Arunachal), Central India (Odisha, Jharkhand, CG), Northern India (Uttarakhand, UP)
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Project Elephant — Framework & Evolution

Launched February 1992 · Centrally Sponsored Scheme · MoEFCC · 22 states & UTs
Project Elephant — Complete Framework
  • Launched: February 1992 | By Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) | As a Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS)
  • Implemented in: 22 States and Union Territories of India (all elephant-range states)
  • Primary objectives:
    • Protect elephants and their habitats and corridors
    • Address human-elephant conflicts
    • Ensure scientific management of captive elephants
    • Construct infrastructure for conservation (veterinary care, field training)
    • Ecological restoration of degraded elephant habitats
  • Project Elephant + Tiger merger (2023-24): Project Elephant was merged with Project Tiger to form an integrated conservation programme. Both now operated under NTCA umbrella — more coordinated and resource-efficient conservation of both flagship species.
  • Financial support: Central Government provides financial and technical support to states | States prepare Annual Plans of Operation (APOs)
  • Elephant Reserves: 33 ERs notified in 14 states — covering 80,778 sq km | ERs are management entities overlapping Tiger Reserves, WLS, Reserved Forests
  • Key distinction: Unlike Tiger Reserves (which have statutory status under WPA), Elephant Reserves do NOT have direct statutory recognition under WPA 1972 — they are administrative designations for management planning purposes. The forests within ERs get legal protection from the underlying NP, WLS, or Reserved Forest status.
  • MIKE Programme: Monitoring of Illegal Killing of Elephants — launched 2003 under CITES resolution | Monitors poaching trends in India and reports to CITES | Started in South Asia in 2003 | Helps assess impact of CITES decisions on elephant populations
  • Gaj Yatra: Nationwide awareness campaign (launched 2017) promoting human-elephant coexistence | “Gaj” = elephant in Sanskrit | Travels across elephant landscapes to educate communities and policymakers
  • Project Suraksha (2024): New GIS-mapping + app-based initiative to track elephant movement and predict human-elephant conflict zones | AI-based early warning systems
Project Elephant — Key Timeline
1992 — Project Elephant launched
Centrally Sponsored Scheme. India’s response to rapid decline in elephant habitats and corridors due to development and agriculture expansion. 22 states participate.
2001 — First Elephant Reserve notified
Singhbhum Elephant Reserve (Jharkhand) becomes India’s first formally notified Elephant Reserve.
2003 — MIKE Programme
Monitoring of Illegal Killing of Elephants (MIKE) programme inaugurated in South Asia under CITES. Tracks poaching patterns and illegal killing in Indian elephant reserves.
2005 — First Elephant Census in ERs
First exclusive enumeration exercise conducted in Elephant Reserves. Used Block Sampling and Line Transect-Dung Count methods.
2010 — National Heritage Animal
Government declares the Asian Elephant as India’s National Heritage Animal (October 22, 2010) — elevating its cultural and conservation status.
2017 — Latest Traditional Census
Synchronised elephant census counted 29,964 wild elephants. Karnataka (6,049), Assam (5,719) and Kerala (3,054) were top states. This remains the last traditional visual census.
2022 — 33rd Elephant Reserve notified
Terai Elephant Reserve (Dudhwa-Pilibhit, Uttar Pradesh) — India’s 33rd ER — covers 3,049 sq km. Second ER in UP (after Shivalik ER). Also: Agasthyamalai ER (TN) = 32nd ER on World Elephant Day 2022 (August 12).
2023-24 — Project Tiger + Elephant merger
Project Elephant merged with Project Tiger under integrated framework — coordinated NTCA management for both flagship species.
October 2025 — SAIEE DNA Census released
India’s first-ever DNA-based elephant census released (SAIEE 2021-25). Estimates 22,446 wild elephants — a new scientific baseline. Western Ghats hosts 53% of India’s elephants.
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SAIEE 2025 — India’s First DNA-Based Elephant Census

Released October 15, 2025 · 22,446 elephants · Scientific milestone Latest
🔴 SAIEE 2025 — Complete Current Affairs Profile
  • Full name: Synchronous All-India Elephant Estimation (SAIEE) 2021–25
  • Released: October 15, 2025 | Conducted jointly by: Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) + Project Elephant + Wildlife Institute of India (WII)
  • Total estimate: 22,446 wild elephants (range: 18,255–26,645)
  • Previous count (2017): 29,964 (traditional visual census) | The 2025 DNA count appears lower — but experts say they are NOT directly comparable (different methods)
  • Key clarification: The 2025 DNA count establishes a NEW scientific baseline — not a comparison with past visual counts. The apparent “decline” is largely methodological.
  • Methodology — India’s first DNA-based census:
    • 21,056 dung samples collected from elephant habitats across 20 states
    • Samples covered 6.7 lakh km of forest trails
    • DNA fingerprinting identified 4,065 unique individual elephants
    • Mark-recapture statistical model extrapolated total population
    • Avoids duplication seen in visual counts | Non-invasive | Replicable for future monitoring
    • Similar to tiger census protocol — aligns India’s two flagship species monitoring
Elephant Population by Landscape (SAIEE 2025)
11,934
Western Ghats
53.17% of India’s elephants | Karnataka (6,013) + TN (3,136) + Kerala | Largest stronghold | Karnataka leads nationally
6,559
NE Hills + Brahmaputra
22.22% | Assam leads (4,159) | NE India = 2nd largest habitat zone | Fragmented habitats + HEC increasing
2,062
Shivalik + Gangetic Plains
9.18% | Uttarakhand (1,792) + UP (257) + Bihar (13) | Trans-Himalayan foothills + terai grasslands
1,891
Central India + Eastern Ghats
8.42% | Odisha (912) + Chhattisgarh (451) + Jharkhand (217) + AP (120) + Maharashtra (63) | Fragmented populations, mining threat
State-Wise Top Elephant Populations (SAIEE 2025)
  • 1. Karnataka: 6,013 — national leader | Nilgiri landscape + Brahmagiri-Bhadra | Part of W. Ghats stronghold
  • 2. Assam: 4,159 — NE India leader | 4 ERs | Annual floods + HEC increasing | Population fragmented
  • 3. Tamil Nadu: 3,136 — 5 ERs (most of any state alongside Assam) | Nilgiri + Mudumalai + Anamalai + Agasthyamalai
  • 4. Kerala: significant population | Periyar + Wayanad + Parambikulam | Part of W. Ghats stronghold
  • 5. Uttarakhand: 1,792 — highest in Shivalik landscape | Corbett + Rajaji | Himalayan foothills
  • 6. Odisha: 912 — Central India’s highest | Similipal + Satkosia | Forest fragmentation from mining
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Elephant Reserve Superlatives & Key Facts

Largest · Smallest · First · Most ERs per state — learn cold for UPSC Prelims
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Largest ER
Singhbhum ER
Jharkhand | ~13,440 sq km | Also India’s FIRST ER (2001) | East-Central landscape | Bordered by Odisha
🔬
Smallest ER
Singphan ER
Nagaland | Only 23.5 sq km | In Nagaland’s Kameng-Sonitpur-Intanki landscape | Despite tiny size, important corridor
🕰️
First ER
Singhbhum ER
Jharkhand | 2001 | India’s first Elephant Reserve | Also largest | East-Central landscape
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Latest ER (33rd)
Terai ER
UP (Dudhwa-Pilibhit) | 2022 | 3,049 sq km | UP’s 2nd ER | Trans-Himalayan terai ecosystem | India-Nepal border region
📊
Most ERs per state
Tamil Nadu + Assam
5 ERs each — joint leaders | TN: Nilgiri, Anamalai, Mudumalai, Agasthyamalai, Kalakad | Assam: Kaziranga-Karbi, Dihing Patkai, Dhansiri-Lungding, Sonitpur, Kameng
State-Wise ER Count — Quick Reference
  • 5 ERs each: Tamil Nadu + Assam (joint leaders)
  • 4 ERs: Kerala
  • 3 ERs: Odisha
  • 2 ERs each: West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Nagaland
  • 1 ER each: Jharkhand, Karnataka, Uttarakhand, Andhra Pradesh, Meghalaya
  • 32nd ER: Agasthyamalai ER, Tamil Nadu — designated on World Elephant Day (August 12, 2022)
  • 31st ER: Lemru ER, Chhattisgarh (2021) — Hasdeo Arand forest controversy: coal mining proposed in this elephant reserve; massive protests by tribal communities; SC scrutiny
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10 Major Elephant Landscapes of India

Elephants organised into 10 landscapes for conservation planning — interconnected habitat complexes

1. East-Central Landscape

South-West Bengal · Jharkhand · Odisha
Elephants: ~1,891 (Central India+EG in SAIEE) | ERs: Singhbhum (JH, largest+first), Mayurbhanj (OD), Sambalpur (OD), South Odisha ER | Key challenge: Severe habitat fragmentation from unmitigated mining + linear infrastructure. Coal mines cutting through elephant corridors. Elephants moving from Jharkhand+Odisha into Chhattisgarh, MP, and Vidarbha (Maharashtra). Invasive plant species degrading habitats. Lemru ER controversy: Hasdeo Arand forest in CG — coal mining vs elephant conservation.

2. Kameng-Sonitpur Landscape

Arunachal Pradesh · Assam
ERs: Kameng ER (Arunachal, est. June 2002 — one of highest elephant densities, includes Sessa Orchid Sanctuary + Eaglenest WLS + Pakhui TR) | Sonitpur ER (Assam) | Features: Himalayan foothills + river valleys. Kameng ER has Kansora-Barkot elephant corridor. High elephant density. Trans-boundary movement with Bhutan.

3. Eastern South Bank Landscape

Assam · Arunachal Pradesh
ERs: Dihing Patkai ER (Assam) | Dehang Debang ER (Arunachal) | South bank of Brahmaputra — dense forests + tea garden areas. Dihing Patkai: Now also a National Park (Assam’s newest NP — Dihing Patkai NP 2021). Intense human-elephant conflict in tea garden areas (elephants raid tea estates).

4. Kaziranga-Karbi Anglong-Intanki Landscape

Assam · Nagaland
ERs: Kaziranga-Karbi Anglong ER (Assam) | Intanki ER (Nagaland) | Singphan ER (Nagaland — smallest ER, 23.5 sq km) | This landscape includes Kaziranga NP (UNESCO WHC) on Brahmaputra floodplain + Karbi Anglong hills as the highland refuge for elephants during Brahmaputra floods. Critical seasonal migration: elephants move between lowlands (Kaziranga) and hills (Karbi Anglong) depending on monsoon flooding.

5. North Bengal-Greater Manas Landscape

Assam · West Bengal
ERs: Manas ER (Assam) | Chirang-Ripu ER (Assam) | North Bengal ER (WB) | Buxa ER (WB) | Trans-boundary with Bhutan (Royal Manas NP). North Bengal’s Dooars region — tea garden + forest mosaic. Duars experiences severe HEC — elephants raid crops and tea estates. Buxa TR also experiences HEC.

6. Meghalaya Landscape

Meghalaya
ER: Garo Hills ER (Meghalaya) | Nokrek Biosphere Reserve is within this landscape | Eastern part of Meghalaya connects to Assam ERs. Garo Hills have dense forests + relatively intact elephant populations. Also important for Hoolock Gibbon and other species. Traditional Garo community practices historically complemented elephant conservation.

7. Brahmagiri-Nilgiri-Eastern Ghats

Karnataka · Kerala · Tamil Nadu · Andhra Pradesh
ERs: Nilgiri ER (TN — largest landscape ER) | Mysore ER (KA) | Anamalai ER (TN) | North Bank ER (KA) | Features: Core of Western Ghats elephant population | Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve | Bandipur-Nagarhole-Mudumalai-Anamalai connected forest complex | India’s most important elephant landscape | ~11,000+ elephants | NH-766 (Ooty Road) through Bandipur is a major elephant-vehicle conflict zone — Supreme Court imposed night travel ban.

8. Periyar-Agasthyamalai Landscape

Kerala · Tamil Nadu
ERs: Anamudi ER (KL) | Periyar ER (KL) | Agasthyamalai ER (TN — 32nd ER, 2022) | Kalakad-Mundanthurai ER (TN) | Southern tip of Western Ghats | Periyar NP (Kerala) — famous for elephants at the Periyar Lake (boat safaris). Agasthyamalai BR within this landscape. Important: transboundary connection between KL and TN forest blocks is vital for genetic exchange.

9. North-Western Landscape

Uttarakhand · Uttar Pradesh
ERs: Shivalik ER (UK) | Terai ER (UP — 33rd ER, 2022, Dudhwa-Pilibhit) | ~2,062 elephants (SAIEE 2025) | Corbett TR + Rajaji NP + Dudhwa NP form the elephant habitat | Trans-Himalayan terai | Pilibhit Tiger Reserve (TX2 award winner for doubling tigers) also covers elephant habitat. Cross-border movement with Nepal (Chitwan, Bardia NPs).

10. Eastern Ghats / South Odisha Landscape

Odisha · Andhra Pradesh
ERs: Mahanadi ER (OD) | Sambalpur ER (OD) | Eastern Ghats ER (AP) | ~1,000+ elephants | Odisha has significant population (912 in SAIEE 2025) — forest fragmentation from mining + iron ore extraction is a major threat. Similipal NP (now 107th NP) also within this landscape. Eastern Ghats elephant populations increasingly isolated.
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All 33 Elephant Reserves — State-Wise Reference Table

14 states · 80,778 sq km total · First = Singhbhum (2001) · Latest = Terai ER (2022)
#Elephant ReserveStateLandscapeArea (sq km)Key Features
1Singhbhum ER ★JharkhandEast-Central~13,440First ER (2001) + Largest ER | Saranda forest | Bordered by Odisha | Dense sal forests
2Mayurbhanj EROdishaEast-Central~3,558Similipal NP+BR | Dense forests | Baripada | Now overlaps with 107th NP
3Mahanadi EROdishaEast-Central~1,067Satkosia Gorge WLS | Mahanadi River | Gharial conservation overlap
4Sambalpur EROdishaEast-Central~2,021Hirakud reservoir area | Connectivity between Jharkhand and Odisha forests
5South Odisha EROdishaEast-Central~2,132Karlapat WLS + Lakhri forest | Eastern Ghats foothills
6Kameng ERArunachal PradeshKameng-Sonitpur~1,879West+East Kameng districts | Sessa Orchid Sanctuary | Eaglenest WLS | Pakhui TR | One of highest elephant densities
7Sonitpur ERAssamKameng-Sonitpur~1,420Nameri TR + reserved forests | Kameng River boundary | Holongapar Gibbon Sanctuary within
8Dihing-Patkai ERAssamEastern South Bank~931Now overlaps with Dihing Patkai NP | Tea garden landscape | Tinsukia+Dibrugarh
9Dhansiri-Lungding ERAssamEastern South Bank~1,020Dhansiri and Lungding reserve forests | Intersects with Karbi Anglong
10Kaziranga-Karbi Anglong ERAssamKaziranga-Karbi-Intanki~3,270Kaziranga NP (UNESCO WHC) + Karbi Anglong hills | Seasonal migration between floodplains and hills | Critical flood refuge
11Intanki ERNagalandKaziranga-Karbi-Intanki~202Intanki NP + forest reserves | Trans-boundary with Assam | Naga Hills forests
12Singphan ER ★NagalandKaziranga-Karbi-Intanki23.5Smallest ER in India! | Despite tiny area — critical corridor linking Nagaland to Assam forest blocks
13Manas ERAssamN. Bengal-Gr. Manas~2,800Manas NP (UNESCO WHC) + TR + BR | Trans-boundary Bhutan | Pygmy Hog+Golden Langur also
14Chirang-Ripu ERAssamN. Bengal-Gr. Manas~1,500Bodoland Territorial Area | Includes Chakrashila WLS (Hoolock Gibbon) | Bhutan border
15North Bengal ERWest BengalN. Bengal-Gr. Manas~2,285Jaldapara WLS | Gorumara WLS | Buxa TR | Dooars region | Tea gardens + forest mosaic
16Buxa ERWest BengalN. Bengal-Gr. Manas~776Buxa TR | Bhutan border corridor | Zero tigers (TR) | Elephant corridor to Bhutan | Historical fort
17Garo Hills ERMeghalayaMeghalaya~3,500Nokrek BR + Balpakram NP | Garo tribe | Red Panda + elephants | Citrus fruit origin
18Nilgiri ERTamil NaduBrahmagiri-Nilgiri-EG~6,700Mudumalai NP | Anamalai TR | Nilgiri BR (first BR India) | Western Ghats core | Largest landscape ER
19Mysore ERKarnatakaBrahmagiri-Nilgiri-EG~6,500Bandipur TR | Nagarhole TR | Part of largest elephant landscape in India | NH-766 conflict zone
20North Bank ERKarnatakaBrahmagiri-Nilgiri-EG~6,000Bandipur corridor + Wayanad corridor | Important genetic connectivity between Ghats elephant populations
21Anamalai ERTamil NaduBrahmagiri-Nilgiri-EG~3,100Anamalai (Indira Gandhi) TR | Pollachi area | Lion-tailed Macaque + Nilgiri Tahr + Elephants
22Anamudi ERKeralaPeriyar-Agasthyamalai~3,000Eravikulam NP (Nilgiri Tahr) + Parambikulam TR | High elephant density | Western Ghats core
23Periyar ERKeralaPeriyar-Agasthyamalai~5,700Periyar NP (famous Periyar Lake boat safaris) + Periyar TR | 500+ elephants | Lion-tailed Macaque
24Wayanad ERKeralaBrahmagiri-Nilgiri-EG~2,135Wayanad WLS | Important corridor connecting KL+TN+KA forests | Tribal areas
25Kalakad-Mundanthurai ERTamil NaduPeriyar-Agasthyamalai~5,000Kalakad-Mundanthurai TR | Southern Western Ghats | Agasthyamalai BR | 2,000+ plant species
26Agasthyamalai ERTamil NaduPeriyar-Agasthyamalai~1,19732nd ER (Aug 12, 2022 — World Elephant Day) | Tirunelveli+Kanyakumari | Agasthyamalai BR overlap | Neelakurinji habitat
27Shivalik ERUttarakhandNorth-Western~5,405Jim Corbett TR | Rajaji NP | Shivalik Hills | Uttarakhand leads in NW landscape (1,792 elephants)
28Terai ER ★Uttar PradeshNorth-Western3,04933rd + Latest ER (2022) | Dudhwa NP + Pilibhit TR | UP’s 2nd ER | India-Nepal border | Terai grassland ecosystem | Pilibhit = TX2 award winner
29Eastern Ghats ERAndhra PradeshEastern Ghats~2,750Nagarjunsagar-Srisailam TR overlap | Nallamala Hills | Andhra Pradesh’s only ER | Fragmented population
30Lemru ERChhattisgarhEast-Central~1,99531st ER (2021) | Hasdeo Arand forest | Coal mining controversy — tribal protests vs conservation | Key corridor
31Badalkhol-Tamorpingla ERChhattisgarhEast-Central~1,652Connects to Jharkhand forests | Guru Ghasidas TR overlap | Important CG elephant habitat
32Subansiri-Arunachal ERArunachal PradeshEastern South Bank~2,800Subansiri district | Mouling NP nearby | Remote high-altitude habitat | Trans-boundary with Assam’s Brahmaputra floodplain
33Dampha (Bhuban Hills) ERChhattisgarh/NagalandEast-Central~500Note: Various sources differ on exact count/naming of some ERs 30-33 — the key facts for UPSC are: 33 total, 14 states, Terai ER = 33rd (2022), Agasthyamalai = 32nd (2022), Lemru = 31st (2021)
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Challenges & Conservation Measures

Human-Elephant Conflict · Habitat fragmentation · Mining · 138 corridors · Gaj Yatra
Key Threats to Elephant Conservation
  • 1. Human-Elephant Conflict (HEC) — India’s most dangerous wildlife conflict:
    • 500+ human deaths annually from elephant attacks (crop raiding, property damage, retaliatory killings)
    • Elephant deaths: electrocution from illegal power lines, railway train collisions (particularly in NE India and Odisha), well drowning, poaching
    • Assam, Odisha, and West Bengal experience the most intense conflict
    • Elephants raiding tea estates in Assam and Arunachal is a growing problem
  • 2. Habitat fragmentation and degradation: Commercial plantations (tea, coffee, rubber, eucalyptus) replacing natural forests | Mining operations (coal in Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh — Hasdeo Arand controversy) | Linear infrastructure: highways (NH-766 through Bandipur), railways, power lines cutting across elephant habitats | Invasive plant species (Lantana, Eupatorium) reducing food availability
  • 3. Loss of elephant corridors: 138 identified corridors | Many degraded or blocked | Key corridors under pressure: Bandipur-Nagarhole (NH-766 — SC night travel ban), Corbett-Rajaji (Haridwar-Rishikesh urbanisation), NE India corridors (tea gardens + settlements)
  • 4. Mining threat (Hasdeo Arand, CG): Lemru Elephant Reserve (31st ER) overlaps with Hasdeo Arand coalfield — one of India’s largest contiguous central Indian forests. Coal mining leases granted here despite tribal protests and conservation objections. Ongoing controversy 2024-25.
  • 5. Population displacement: Elephants moving from Jharkhand+Odisha into Chhattisgarh, MP, and Vidarbha due to habitat degradation — creating HEC in new areas with no prior coexistence tradition
  • 6. Great Nicobar Development Project (2024-25): Although primarily about turtles and forests, the proposed transshipment port and development could also fragment Andaman & Nicobar’s elephant habitats
Conservation Measures — What India is Doing
  • Project Elephant (1992) + merger with Project Tiger (2023-24): Financial + technical support to states | 33 ERs | Corridor protection | Community development
  • 138 elephant corridors identified: MoEFCC + WII mapping | Legal protection and physical restoration ongoing | ₹350 crore CAMPA funds for corridor restoration (2024)
  • Compensation scheme: ₹25 lakh for human death due to elephant attack | Crop damage compensation | Faster claims processing in most states
  • Early warning systems: AI+ML based tracking in Assam and Odisha | SMS alert systems for villages near elephant movement zones | Reduced conflict incidents by 30% in pilot areas (WII, 2024)
  • Project Suraksha (2024): GIS mapping + mobile app to track elephant movement in real time | Forest staff receive alerts when elephants approach villages | First systematic tech-based HEC mitigation
  • Gaj Yatra: Nationwide awareness campaign (2017+) for human-elephant coexistence | Travels through elephant corridors educating communities
  • Night travel ban on NH-766 (Ooty Road): Supreme Court order banning vehicular traffic through Bandipur TR at night — reduces highway road kills of elephants and tigers
  • MIKE Programme (CITES, 2003): Monitoring of Illegal Killing of Elephants — anti-poaching intelligence and data sharing | Tracks ivory poaching trends
  • DNA census (SAIEE 2025): First DNA-based census providing accurate baseline for future monitoring | Enables individual identification for long-term tracking
  • Cross-border cooperation: India-Bhutan (Manas-Royal Manas) | India-Nepal (Terai Arc Landscape) | India-Bangladesh | India-Myanmar for transboundary elephant population management

⭐ Elephant Reserves — Complete Cheat Sheet

  • Asian Elephant: Elephas maximus | EN (IUCN) | Schedule I (WPA 1972) | CITES Appendix I | National Heritage Animal (Oct 22, 2010) | India = 60%+ of global Asian elephants | Matriarchal herds | Gestation 18-22 months | Keystone + umbrella species
  • Project Elephant: February 1992 | Centrally Sponsored Scheme | MoEFCC | 22 states+UTs | Merged with Project Tiger 2023-24 | Financial+technical support to states
  • Elephant Reserves: 33 ERs in 14 states | 80,778 sq km | NOT statutory (unlike Tiger Reserves) — administrative management designation | Overlaps with NPs, WLS, Reserved Forests | 10 elephant landscapes
  • First ER: Singhbhum ER (Jharkhand, 2001) — also LARGEST (13,440 sq km)
  • Smallest ER: Singphan ER (Nagaland, 23.5 sq km)
  • Latest ER (33rd): Terai ER (Dudhwa-Pilibhit, UP, 2022, 3,049 sq km) | 32nd = Agasthyamalai ER (TN, Aug 12 2022, World Elephant Day) | 31st = Lemru ER (Chhattisgarh, 2021 — coal mining controversy)
  • States with most ERs: Tamil Nadu + Assam (5 each) | Kerala (4) | Odisha (3) | WB + UP + Arunachal + CG + Nagaland (2 each) | Jharkhand+KA+UK+AP+Meghalaya (1 each)
  • SAIEE 2025 DNA Census: Released Oct 15, 2025 | 22,446 elephants (range 18,255-26,645) | First DNA-based census in India | 21,056 dung samples, 4,065 unique elephants identified, 6.7 lakh km trails | NOT directly comparable with 2017 count (29,964) — different methods | New scientific baseline
  • SAIEE 2025 by landscape: Western Ghats 11,934 (53%) + NE Hills+Brahmaputra 6,559 (22%) + Shivalik+Gangetic 2,062 + Central India+EG 1,891
  • State leaders (SAIEE 2025): Karnataka 6,013 (leads nationally) → Assam 4,159 → Tamil Nadu 3,136 → Uttarakhand 1,792 → Odisha 912
  • 138 elephant corridors: Identified by WII+MoEFCC | Many degraded or blocked | Key: Bandipur-Nagarhole (NH-766, SC night ban), Corbett-Rajaji, NE India corridors, Manas-Bhutan
  • HEC — Human-Elephant Conflict: 500+ human deaths/year | Electrocution + railway accidents + crop raiding | AI-based early warning (Assam, Odisha — 30% reduction) | Compensation: ₹25 lakh for human death
  • Hasdeo Arand controversy: Lemru ER (31st ER, CG) overlaps coal reserves | Mining vs elephant conservation | Tribal protests | SC scrutiny 2024-25
  • Project Suraksha (2024): GIS+app tracking of elephant movement | Real-time alerts for villages
  • Gaj Yatra: Awareness campaign (2017+) for coexistence
  • MIKE Programme: Monitoring of Illegal Killing of Elephants | CITES 2003 | Anti-poaching intelligence
  • Key landscape: Brahmagiri-Nilgiri-Eastern Ghats: Karnataka+KL+TN | 11,000+ elephants | India’s most important elephant landscape | Bandipur-Nagarhole-Mudumalai-Anamalai connected complex
  • Kaziranga-Karbi Anglong: Seasonal elephant migration — floodplain (Kaziranga, during non-flood) ↔ Karbi Anglong hills (during Brahmaputra floods). A critical survival adaptation.

🧪 Practice MCQs + PYQ-style Questions
Current Affairs 2025
Q1. Consider the following statements about India’s 2025 Synchronous All-India Elephant Estimation (SAIEE): 1. The SAIEE 2025 estimates India’s wild elephant population at 22,446 — making it India’s first-ever DNA-based elephant census. 2. The Western Ghats region hosts the largest share (~53%) of India’s elephants, with Karnataka leading among states. 3. The 2025 figure of 22,446 is directly comparable to the 2017 estimate of 29,964 and confirms a ~25% population decline. 4. The census used DNA mark-recapture methodology based on dung sample analysis covering 6.7 lakh km of forest trails. Select ALL correct statements:
✅ Answer: (d) — Statements 1, 2, and 4 are correct. Statement 3 is WRONG — the figures are NOT directly comparable.
1 ✅ First DNA-based census: The SAIEE (Synchronous All-India Elephant Estimation) 2021–25 results were released on October 15, 2025, estimating 22,446 wild elephants. This is India’s first-ever DNA-based elephant census — a landmark methodological shift from visual/dung-count methods used previously. It was conducted jointly by MoEFCC, Project Elephant, and the Wildlife Institute of India (WII). 2 ✅ Western Ghats + Karnataka leads: The Western Ghats region hosts 11,934 elephants — representing 53.17% of India’s total elephant population — making it the largest stronghold. Karnataka leads among states with 6,013 elephants (highest nationally), followed by Assam (4,159) and Tamil Nadu (3,136). 3 ❌ NOT directly comparable: This is the critical UPSC nuance. The WII report itself explicitly stated: “given the methodological changes, it is not comparable to past figures and may be treated as a new monitoring baseline.” The 2017 count of 29,964 used visual sightings and dung-count methods, while SAIEE 2025 used DNA fingerprinting. The different methods count animals differently — the apparent “decline” is largely methodological, not necessarily a real population crash. Experts and WII caution against drawing conclusions about population trends from the comparison. 4 ✅ DNA mark-recapture methodology: 21,056 dung samples collected across 20 states covering 6.7 lakh km (670,000 km) of forest trails. DNA fingerprinting identified 4,065 unique individual elephants. A mark-recapture statistical model extrapolated the total population (range: 18,255–26,645). This method is the same approach used for tiger census and is considered significantly more accurate than visual or dung-count methods.
Practice
Q2. Consider the following pairs — Elephant Reserve : State: 1. Singhbhum Elephant Reserve — Jharkhand (first and largest ER) 2. Singphan Elephant Reserve — Nagaland (smallest ER, 23.5 sq km) 3. Terai Elephant Reserve — Uttar Pradesh (33rd and latest ER, 2022) 4. Lemru Elephant Reserve — Chhattisgarh (31st ER, coal mining controversy) Select ALL correctly matched pairs:
✅ Answer: (d) All four are correctly matched
1 ✅ Singhbhum ER — Jharkhand: The Singhbhum Elephant Reserve in Jharkhand is simultaneously India’s FIRST Elephant Reserve (notified in 2001) AND its LARGEST (approximately 13,440 sq km). It covers the dense Saranda sal forests bordering Odisha. The East-Central elephant landscape — which includes Singhbhum — is facing severe habitat fragmentation from unmitigated mining activities and linear infrastructure. 2 ✅ Singphan ER — Nagaland: Singphan Elephant Reserve in Nagaland is India’s SMALLEST Elephant Reserve, covering only 23.5 sq km. Despite its tiny area, it serves a critical function as a wildlife corridor connecting elephant populations in Nagaland with those in Assam’s forests. It is part of the Kaziranga-Karbi Anglong-Intanki elephant landscape. 3 ✅ Terai ER — Uttar Pradesh: The Terai Elephant Reserve at Dudhwa-Pilibhit, Uttar Pradesh was notified in 2022 as India’s 33rd (and latest) Elephant Reserve. It covers 3,049 sq km and is UP’s second ER (after Shivalik ER in Uttarakhand). It includes Dudhwa National Park and Pilibhit Tiger Reserve (famous for doubling its tiger population — TX2 Award). Located on the India-Nepal border in the terai grassland-forest ecosystem. 4 ✅ Lemru ER — Chhattisgarh: Lemru Elephant Reserve (31st ER, 2021) is located in Hasdeo Arand forest, Chhattisgarh — one of India’s largest contiguous central Indian forests. It has been at the centre of a major environmental controversy as the government approved coal mining leases in the Hasdeo Arand area, which forms the core of this elephant reserve. Indigenous tribal communities and environmentalists have held sustained protests (including Gond tribe marches to state capitals). The SC has been examining the matter in 2024-25.
The Kaziranga-Karbi Anglong elephant migration is one of the most fascinating and ecologically important wildlife migration patterns in India — and a perfect example for UPSC Mains on human-wildlife coexistence, conservation challenges, and the importance of wildlife corridors. The migration: Kaziranga National Park sits on the Brahmaputra River’s floodplain. Every year during the monsoon (July-September), the Brahmaputra floods extensively — sometimes covering 70-80% of Kaziranga. Wildlife must flee to higher ground to survive. Elephants — being large, intelligent animals — have evolved a remarkable adaptation: they migrate from the Kaziranga floodplains upward into the Karbi Anglong hills to the south, where the land is higher and flood-free. When floods recede (November onwards), they return to Kaziranga. The corridor problem: Between Kaziranga (floodplain) and Karbi Anglong (hills) lies National Highway 37 (NH-37) — a major arterial road. As traffic increased over the decades, elephants began getting killed in vehicle collisions while attempting their seasonal migration. The highway effectively became a barrier that cut their ancient migration route. The conservation response: Underpasses and green corridors were constructed under NH-37 for elephant crossing. Speed limits enforced during elephant migration season. Forest staff monitor crossing points. Despite these measures, road kills continue. This is a classic case study of how linear infrastructure (roads, railways) fragments wildlife habitats and disrupts ancient migration patterns. UPSC Mains relevance: This example can be used in questions on: wildlife corridors and their importance; human-wildlife conflict; challenges of conservation in the context of development; infrastructure vs ecology trade-offs; role of community involvement in conservation. The Kaziranga-Karbi Anglong seasonal migration demonstrates that effective conservation requires thinking at a landscape scale — not just protecting a park in isolation but protecting the entire ecosystem including corridors.

Legacy IAS — UPSC Civil Services Coaching, Bangalore  |  Sources: Down to Earth — India’s SAIEE 2025 (22,446 elephants, Oct 15 2025; DNA methodology; Western Ghats 11,934=53%); Vajiram & Ravi — India’s Elephant Population 2025 (SAIEE; Karnataka 6,013; Assam 4,159; not directly comparable to 2017); GK Today — India’s Elephant Count DNA Census 2025 (22,446, 21,056 dung samples, 4,065 unique); WII/MoEFCC SAIEE Report 2021-25 (methodology: DNA mark-recapture, 6.7 lakh km trails); IAS Gyan — Elephant Census 2025 (150 corridors, 500+ human deaths/yr, Project Suraksha 2024, CAMPA ₹350 crore); MapsForUPSC — Elephant Reserves India (33 ERs, Singhbhum largest 13,440 sq km, Singphan smallest 23.5 sq km); StudyIQ — Elephant Reserves 2025 (Terai ER=33rd 2022, Agasthyamalai=32nd Aug 12 2022, 14 states, 80,778 sq km); PWOnlyIAS — Elephant Reserves India (33 ERs, 10 landscapes, MIKE programme); Guidely — Elephant Reserves India (SAIEE 2025 Karnataka 6013, Assam 4159, TN 3136, Uttarakhand 1792); Wikipedia — Project Elephant (1992, 80,778 sq km, MIKE 2003 CITES); InclusiveIAS — Elephant Reserves India 2025; Vajiram — Wild Elephant Numbers Decline (SAIEE, Project Elephant 2.0 draft).

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