Biodiversity & Conservation क्या है?
ऐतिहासिक पृष्ठभूमि
मुख्य प्रावधान
9 points- 1.
Levels of Biodiversity: Genetic diversity (variation within a species), Species diversity (variety of species in a region), and Ecosystem diversity (variety of habitats, communities, and ecological processes).
- 2.
Importance: Provides essential ecosystem services (e.g., pollination, water purification, climate regulation), economic value (food, medicine, raw materials, tourism), aesthetic and ethical value, and resilience to environmental changes.
- 3.
Threats to Biodiversity (HIPPO): Habitat loss and fragmentation, Invasive alien species, Pollution (including plastic pollution), Population (human overpopulation), Overexploitation, and Climate change.
- 4.
Conservation Strategies: In-situ conservation (protection of species in their natural habitats, e.g., National Parks, Wildlife Sanctuaries, Biosphere Reserves, Sacred Groves) and Ex-situ conservation (conservation outside natural habitats, e.g., Zoos, Botanical Gardens, Seed Banks, Gene Banks, Cryopreservation).
- 5.
Biodiversity Hotspots: Regions with high levels of endemic species and significant habitat loss (e.g., Western Ghats, Himalayas in India).
- 6.
Key Institutions in India: National Biodiversity Authority (NBA), Wildlife Institute of India (WII), Zoological Survey of India (ZSI), Botanical Survey of India (BSI), Forest Survey of India (FSI).
- 7.
International Agreements: Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora), Ramsar Convention (Wetlands of International Importance), Bonn Convention (Convention on Migratory Species).
- 8.
Red List: IUCN Red List of Threatened Species assesses the conservation status of species globally.
- 9.
Ecosystem Services: The benefits that humans receive from ecosystems, such as clean air and water, pollination, and climate regulation, which are directly linked to biodiversity.
दृश्य सामग्री
Biodiversity & Conservation: Levels, Importance, Threats & Strategies
This mind map illustrates the multifaceted concept of biodiversity, its significance, the major threats it faces (including pollution, directly linking to marine plastic pollution), and the various conservation strategies employed at national and international levels.
Biodiversity & Conservation
- ●Levels of Biodiversity
- ●Importance of Biodiversity
- ●Threats to Biodiversity (HIPPO)
- ●Conservation Strategies
- ●Legal & Institutional Framework (India & Global)
In-situ vs. Ex-situ Conservation
This table provides a clear comparison between in-situ and ex-situ conservation methods, highlighting their definitions, examples, advantages, and disadvantages. This distinction is crucial for understanding biodiversity conservation strategies.
| Feature | In-situ Conservation | Ex-situ Conservation |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Conservation of species in their natural habitats. | Conservation of species outside their natural habitats. |
| Examples | National Parks, Wildlife Sanctuaries, Biosphere Reserves, Sacred Groves, Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). | Zoos, Botanical Gardens, Seed Banks, Gene Banks, Cryopreservation, Aquaria. |
| Advantages | Protects entire ecosystems; allows species to evolve naturally; cost-effective for large populations; maintains genetic diversity within natural populations. | Protects highly endangered species; controlled environment for breeding; research opportunities; public education; useful for species recovery programs. |
| Disadvantages | Difficult to manage large areas; vulnerable to natural disasters and human pressures; requires extensive land/sea area. | High maintenance costs; limited genetic diversity; species may lose natural adaptations; reintroduction challenges; ethical concerns. |
| Relevance to Marine Life | Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), Coral Reef Sanctuaries, Mangrove Reserves. | Marine aquaria, Gene banks for marine species, Captive breeding programs for endangered marine mammals/fish. |
हालिया विकास
5 विकासAdoption of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) at COP15 of CBD (2022), setting new global targets for biodiversity conservation by 2030.
Increased focus on ecosystem restoration, aligning with the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021-2030).
India's continued efforts in species-specific conservation programs (e.g., Project Tiger, Project Elephant, Project Dolphin).
Emphasis on integrating biodiversity concerns into development planning and promoting nature-based solutions.
Expansion of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) globally to safeguard marine biodiversity.
