Context:
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The National Board for Wildlife (NBWL) has recommended reinstating the Rhesus Macaque under Schedule II of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972.
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The species was removed from Schedule II in 2022, which led to serious concerns regarding unregulated management, cruelty, and illegal capture.
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Experts argue that high population numbers do not eliminate conservation risks, especially in human-dominated landscapes.
Key Highlights:
Policy and Legal Developments
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Proposal to re-list Rhesus Macaques under Schedule II to:
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Restore legal safeguards
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Regulate capture, handling, and population control
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Removal in 2022 weakened the Forest Department’s authority to intervene scientifically.
Need for Scientific Management
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Primatologists stress the importance of:
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Systematic data collection
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Evidence-based population control
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Lack of legal cover complicates:
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Sterilisation programmes
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Ethical conflict mitigation
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Monitoring of exploitation and trafficking
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Human–Wildlife Conflict
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Rising conflicts in urban and peri-urban areas due to:
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Habitat fragmentation
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Food availability from human sources
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Unscientific trapping and relocation:
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Increases disease transmission
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Raises mortality due to predation and stress
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Municipal bodies lack technical expertise in primate management, necessitating Forest Department leadership.
Detailed Insights:
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Experts recommend zonal management strategies:
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Conservation Zones: Minimal human interference
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Co-existence Zones: Public sensitisation and non-invasive measures
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Management Zones: Sterilisation and controlled intervention
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Sterilisation programmes, such as those in Himachal Pradesh, are cited as:
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Humane
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Scientifically validated
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Effective in conflict reduction
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The sharp 82% decline in Bonnet Macaque populations over 35 years illustrates how:
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Even “common” species can rapidly decline
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Absence of monitoring can mask long-term threats
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Ecological role of Rhesus Macaques:
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Important seed dispersers
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Support forest regeneration and ecosystem balance
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Public feeding of monkeys worsens conflict; behavioural sensitisation is key to sustainable management.
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
GS Paper 3 – Environment & Ecology
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Human–wildlife conflict management
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Species conservation beyond endangered categories
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Role of science-based wildlife governance
GS Paper 2 – Governance
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Legal frameworks for wildlife protection
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Institutional roles: NBWL, Forest Departments
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Evidence-based policymaking
Prelims Focus
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Wildlife (Protection) Act schedules
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NBWL functions
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Concepts: Human–wildlife conflict, sterilisation programmes, ecological services
