Dugong Conservation in India

Why in News: Dugongs (Dugong dugon), herbivorous marine mammals, once widespread in Gulf of Mannar, Palk Bay, Gulf of Kutch, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, are now reduced to a few hundred.

Recent Conservation Efforts

Dugong Conservation Reserve (2022):

  • 12,000 hectares in Palk Bay, Tamil Nadu, under Wildlife (Protection) Act.
  • Community participation and WII support reduced poaching, encouraged safe release from by-catch.
  • Population estimated at 200+ individuals.

IUCN recognition: Reserve praised for ecological significance and innovative restoration.

Technological interventions:

  • Drone platforms for surveillance.
  • Acoustic & satellite mapping of seagrass beds.
  • Eco-restoration using bamboo & coconut rope frames.

Challenges Ahead

  • Human activity: mechanised fishing, port construction, dredging, agricultural/industrial pollution.
  • Climate threats: rising sea temperatures, acidification, storms damaging seagrass meadows.
  • By-catch mortality persists despite awareness drives.
  • Regional imbalance: Populations in Gujarat & Andamans smaller and less protected.
  • Cross-border challenge: Dugongs migrate through Palk Strait → need India–Sri Lanka cooperation.
  • Funding gaps: Conservation requires decades-long sustained investment; current funding inconsistent.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen community engagement with fishers as conservation partners.
  • Enhance regional cooperation with Sri Lanka.
  • Ensure consistent funding via compensatory afforestation funds & global partnerships.
  • Blend traditional ecological knowledge with modern technology (drones, echosounders).
  • Extend similar models to other marine species (turtles, sharks, corals).

Conclusion

Dugong conservation exemplifies how community-led, technology-aided, and internationally endorsed models can balance ecological needs with human activity.

GS Paper III (Environment, Ecology, Biodiversity & Conservation)

  • Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 – Dugong Conservation Reserve (2022).

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