
First-ever grassland bird census : A must-know for UPSC exam
(Relevance: The IUCN status of species has been asked in the UPSC examination multiple times. This grassland bird census encompasses important species relevant from an exam perspective. Also, the recent report on the status of Tigers in the Kaziranga National Park is important for Prelims and Mains.)
Between March 18 and May 25, a survey to record the grassland bird population in Kaziranga National Park was undertaken by a team of forest officials, scientists, and conservationists. It is the 'first-ever grassland bird census' conducted in Assam's Kaziranga National Park. This census was also mentioned in the Mann ki Baat radio programme by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday (July 27).
1. The grassland bird census recorded a total of 43 grassland bird species, including 1 Critically Endangered, 2 Endangered, and 6 Vulnerable species, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List.
2. A new methodology was deployed in the survey, which was also mentioned in the Maan ki baat program. According to Kaziranga National Park Director Dr. Sonali Ghosh, the use of passive acoustic recording monitoring was the highlight of the survey.
3. 'Surveying these small, shy, and highly camouflaged birds is very difficult using traditional methods like visual counting. So, the acoustic recorders were placed in tall trees near grasslands during the breeding season of the birds, between March and May. This is the season when they are very vocal, calling out for mates and with males defending territory. The instruments recorded all the birds singing in the landscape,' she said.
4. Different tools were then used to identify the birds based on the recordings. For the bird sounds that were not identifiable, a spectrogram (a graphical representation of the sound) was created using software to aid in identification. The Birdnet tool was also used, which applies Machine Learning to try and identify species by bird song.
5. The survey prioritised 10 species that are either globally threatened or endemic to the Brahmaputra floodplains:
6. The national park authorities have been particularly excited by the discovery of a breeding colony of the endangered Finn's Weaver, which is endemic to the Brahmaputra flood plain.
7. Dr. Ghosh called grassland birds 'an indicator of good health' of an ecosystem, likening them to indicators such as BMI for human health. 'The presence of these birds tells us that the habitat is healthy,' she said.
1. Grasslands — home to the great Poaceae family, with its 10,000 to 12,000 members or species — cover vast swathes of landmass throughout the world and support a wide variety of animal life. They thrive in places where the rainfall is low, typically between 600 and 1500 mm annually.
2. They are even more useful than forests and provide a host of ecosystem services — storing water and carbon, recycling chemical, and controlling the climate. And, vitally, feeding us and our livestock, besides the wild herbivores that roam the plains. Even the ferocious carnivores must be grateful to grasslands: because grasses feed their prey species.
3. In India, almost a quarter of landmass is covered in grassland. This includes the alpine meadows of the Himalayas, the chaurs in the foothills, the famous terai grasslands in the flood plains of the Ganges and Brahmaputra, the phumdis, or the quivering wet grasslands of Manipur (where the deer 'dance'), the savannas of western and peninsular India and the renowned 'sholas' of the Western Ghats.
4. Different names are used in the world to refer to grasslands. According to WWF, it is known as 'savannah' in Africa, 'cerrado' in South America, 'prairie' in North America, 'steppe' in central Asia, and 'meadow' in the UK.
5. What makes them special is their ability to survive and keep growing no matter how much they're munched or nibbled by animals. It supports all kinds of wildlife. The one-horned Indian rhinoceros and wild water buffalo live in the wet grasslands of Kaziranga and Manas Tiger Reserve. The swamp deer live in the terai. Manipur's rare 'dancing deer' or 'Sangai' thrive on the floating phumdis of Loktak Lake.
6. Grasslands (except a few) — like the wetlands — in India get no protection. They are free to be exploited. According to the report on the degradation of rangelands, published last year, by the UN Convention on Combating Desertification (UNCCD), less than 5 per cent of India's grasslands fall within protected areas, and the total grassland area declined from 18 to 12 million hectares between 2005 and 2015.
1. On Tuesday (29th July), officials released a summary report for 2024 titled 'Status of Tigers in the Kaziranga Tiger Reserve', with the findings of a Phase IV tiger monitoring initiative across Eastern Assam, Nagaon, and Biswanath Wildlife Divisions. This was done at the direction of the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA).
2. The survey documented 148 tigers in the reserve, up from 104 recorded in 2022, 99 in 2018 and 96 in 2014. Reserve director Sonali Ghosh said these findings show that Kaziranga has the third-highest density of tigers in the world, after Corbett Tiger Reserve in Uttarakhand and Bandipur Tiger Reserve in Karnataka.
3. The survey was conducted over 103 days using 293 paired camera traps across 1307.49 square kilometres, which yielded 4,011 tiger images in 242 locations. The report states that the right-flank stripes of the animals in these images were used to identify 148 adult tigers – 83 females, 55 males, and 10 with undetermined gender.
4. 'Despite these successes, Kaziranga's tiger population faces persistent challenges, including habitat fragmentation, human-wildlife conflict, and the pressures of agricultural expansion and infrastructure development around the tiger reserve', it states.
Covering 42,996 ha, Kaziranga National Park is located in the State of Assam. It is the single largest undisturbed and representative area in the Brahmaputra Valley floodplain. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site recognised in 1985. It is renowned for its significant population of one-horned rhinoceroses.
The NTCA is a statutory body under the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change constituted under the enabling provisions of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, for strengthening tiger conservation, as per powers and functions assigned to it under the said Act. The NTCA conducts the All India Tiger Estimation to track the big cat numbers, usually in cycles of four years.
Yes. Established in 2023, honouring 50 years of Project Tiger, the IBCA aims to promote the protection of seven big cats: the tiger, leopard, snow leopard, lion, cheetah, puma and jaguar.
The 'Project Tiger' is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS) launched by the Central government on April 1, 1973, in a bid to promote conservation of the tiger. The programme came at a time when India's tiger population was rapidly dwindling.
📍Wildlife Protection Act (WPA), 1972 status: Schedule I.
📍IUCN Red List status: Endangered.
📍CITES status: Appendix I.
(1) Consider the following pairs:
How many pairs given above are correctly matched?
(a) Only one pair
(b) Only two pairs
(c) Only three pairs
(d) All four pairs
(2) In the grasslands, trees do not replace the grasses as a part of an ecological succession because of (UPSC CSE 2013)
(a) insects and fungi
(b) limited sunlight and paucity of nutrients
(c) water limits and fire
(d) None of the above
(Source: Down in Jungleland: Instead of golf courses, India should worry about its grasslands, Grassland bird census in Kaziranga: What was special about this survey, which PM Modi talked about, UPSC Issue at a Glance | Why Tigers Matter: Environmental, cultural, and economic significance of India's apex predator, 103 days, 293 camera traps, 4,011 images – how Kaziranga Tiger Reserve counted its big cats, and what it found
Subscribe to our UPSC newsletter. Stay updated with the latest UPSC articles by joining our Telegram channel – IndianExpress UPSC Hub, and follow us on Instagram and X.
🚨 Click Here to read the UPSC Essentials magazine for July 2025. Share your views and suggestions in the comment box or at manas.srivastava@indianexpress.com🚨
Khushboo Kumari is a Deputy Copy Editor with The Indian Express. She has done her graduation and post-graduation in History from the University of Delhi. At The Indian Express, she writes for the UPSC section. She holds experience in UPSC-related content development. You can contact her via email: khushboo.kumari@indianexpress.com ... Read More
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Indian Express
a day ago
- Indian Express
First-ever grassland bird census : A must-know for UPSC exam
Take a look at the essential concepts, terms, quotes, or phenomena every day and brush up your knowledge. Here's your knowledge nugget on the grassland bird census at the Kaziranga National Park. (Relevance: The IUCN status of species has been asked in the UPSC examination multiple times. This grassland bird census encompasses important species relevant from an exam perspective. Also, the recent report on the status of Tigers in the Kaziranga National Park is important for Prelims and Mains.) Between March 18 and May 25, a survey to record the grassland bird population in Kaziranga National Park was undertaken by a team of forest officials, scientists, and conservationists. It is the 'first-ever grassland bird census' conducted in Assam's Kaziranga National Park. This census was also mentioned in the Mann ki Baat radio programme by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday (July 27). 1. The grassland bird census recorded a total of 43 grassland bird species, including 1 Critically Endangered, 2 Endangered, and 6 Vulnerable species, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List. 2. A new methodology was deployed in the survey, which was also mentioned in the Maan ki baat program. According to Kaziranga National Park Director Dr. Sonali Ghosh, the use of passive acoustic recording monitoring was the highlight of the survey. 3. 'Surveying these small, shy, and highly camouflaged birds is very difficult using traditional methods like visual counting. So, the acoustic recorders were placed in tall trees near grasslands during the breeding season of the birds, between March and May. This is the season when they are very vocal, calling out for mates and with males defending territory. The instruments recorded all the birds singing in the landscape,' she said. 4. Different tools were then used to identify the birds based on the recordings. For the bird sounds that were not identifiable, a spectrogram (a graphical representation of the sound) was created using software to aid in identification. The Birdnet tool was also used, which applies Machine Learning to try and identify species by bird song. 5. The survey prioritised 10 species that are either globally threatened or endemic to the Brahmaputra floodplains: 6. The national park authorities have been particularly excited by the discovery of a breeding colony of the endangered Finn's Weaver, which is endemic to the Brahmaputra flood plain. 7. Dr. Ghosh called grassland birds 'an indicator of good health' of an ecosystem, likening them to indicators such as BMI for human health. 'The presence of these birds tells us that the habitat is healthy,' she said. 1. Grasslands — home to the great Poaceae family, with its 10,000 to 12,000 members or species — cover vast swathes of landmass throughout the world and support a wide variety of animal life. They thrive in places where the rainfall is low, typically between 600 and 1500 mm annually. 2. They are even more useful than forests and provide a host of ecosystem services — storing water and carbon, recycling chemical, and controlling the climate. And, vitally, feeding us and our livestock, besides the wild herbivores that roam the plains. Even the ferocious carnivores must be grateful to grasslands: because grasses feed their prey species. 3. In India, almost a quarter of landmass is covered in grassland. This includes the alpine meadows of the Himalayas, the chaurs in the foothills, the famous terai grasslands in the flood plains of the Ganges and Brahmaputra, the phumdis, or the quivering wet grasslands of Manipur (where the deer 'dance'), the savannas of western and peninsular India and the renowned 'sholas' of the Western Ghats. 4. Different names are used in the world to refer to grasslands. According to WWF, it is known as 'savannah' in Africa, 'cerrado' in South America, 'prairie' in North America, 'steppe' in central Asia, and 'meadow' in the UK. 5. What makes them special is their ability to survive and keep growing no matter how much they're munched or nibbled by animals. It supports all kinds of wildlife. The one-horned Indian rhinoceros and wild water buffalo live in the wet grasslands of Kaziranga and Manas Tiger Reserve. The swamp deer live in the terai. Manipur's rare 'dancing deer' or 'Sangai' thrive on the floating phumdis of Loktak Lake. 6. Grasslands (except a few) — like the wetlands — in India get no protection. They are free to be exploited. According to the report on the degradation of rangelands, published last year, by the UN Convention on Combating Desertification (UNCCD), less than 5 per cent of India's grasslands fall within protected areas, and the total grassland area declined from 18 to 12 million hectares between 2005 and 2015. 1. On Tuesday (29th July), officials released a summary report for 2024 titled 'Status of Tigers in the Kaziranga Tiger Reserve', with the findings of a Phase IV tiger monitoring initiative across Eastern Assam, Nagaon, and Biswanath Wildlife Divisions. This was done at the direction of the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA). 2. The survey documented 148 tigers in the reserve, up from 104 recorded in 2022, 99 in 2018 and 96 in 2014. Reserve director Sonali Ghosh said these findings show that Kaziranga has the third-highest density of tigers in the world, after Corbett Tiger Reserve in Uttarakhand and Bandipur Tiger Reserve in Karnataka. 3. The survey was conducted over 103 days using 293 paired camera traps across 1307.49 square kilometres, which yielded 4,011 tiger images in 242 locations. The report states that the right-flank stripes of the animals in these images were used to identify 148 adult tigers – 83 females, 55 males, and 10 with undetermined gender. 4. 'Despite these successes, Kaziranga's tiger population faces persistent challenges, including habitat fragmentation, human-wildlife conflict, and the pressures of agricultural expansion and infrastructure development around the tiger reserve', it states. Covering 42,996 ha, Kaziranga National Park is located in the State of Assam. It is the single largest undisturbed and representative area in the Brahmaputra Valley floodplain. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site recognised in 1985. It is renowned for its significant population of one-horned rhinoceroses. The NTCA is a statutory body under the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change constituted under the enabling provisions of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, for strengthening tiger conservation, as per powers and functions assigned to it under the said Act. The NTCA conducts the All India Tiger Estimation to track the big cat numbers, usually in cycles of four years. Yes. Established in 2023, honouring 50 years of Project Tiger, the IBCA aims to promote the protection of seven big cats: the tiger, leopard, snow leopard, lion, cheetah, puma and jaguar. The 'Project Tiger' is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS) launched by the Central government on April 1, 1973, in a bid to promote conservation of the tiger. The programme came at a time when India's tiger population was rapidly dwindling. 📍Wildlife Protection Act (WPA), 1972 status: Schedule I. 📍IUCN Red List status: Endangered. 📍CITES status: Appendix I. (1) Consider the following pairs: How many pairs given above are correctly matched? (a) Only one pair (b) Only two pairs (c) Only three pairs (d) All four pairs (2) In the grasslands, trees do not replace the grasses as a part of an ecological succession because of (UPSC CSE 2013) (a) insects and fungi (b) limited sunlight and paucity of nutrients (c) water limits and fire (d) None of the above (Source: Down in Jungleland: Instead of golf courses, India should worry about its grasslands, Grassland bird census in Kaziranga: What was special about this survey, which PM Modi talked about, UPSC Issue at a Glance | Why Tigers Matter: Environmental, cultural, and economic significance of India's apex predator, 103 days, 293 camera traps, 4,011 images – how Kaziranga Tiger Reserve counted its big cats, and what it found Subscribe to our UPSC newsletter. Stay updated with the latest UPSC articles by joining our Telegram channel – IndianExpress UPSC Hub, and follow us on Instagram and X. 🚨 Click Here to read the UPSC Essentials magazine for July 2025. Share your views and suggestions in the comment box or at Khushboo Kumari is a Deputy Copy Editor with The Indian Express. She has done her graduation and post-graduation in History from the University of Delhi. At The Indian Express, she writes for the UPSC section. She holds experience in UPSC-related content development. You can contact her via email: ... Read More

Time of India
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- Time of India
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News18
a day ago
- News18
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To address this structural flaw, NEP emphasizes creativity, analytical reasoning, and conceptual clarity across all educational levels. By promoting research-oriented pedagogy, transdisciplinary thinking, and experiential learning, the policy aims to develop a new generation of creatives, innovators, and problem solvers who will drive the nation forward in a knowledge-based economy. Innovation is crucial for India's development objectives in the 21st century. Unlike nations like China, India's path to success must be paved with education, adaptation, innovation, and leadership. Future challenges, from digital infrastructure to green energy solutions, demand a workforce equipped with these skills. For example, second-tier engineering colleges in Uttar Pradesh, which once produced graduates for monotonous back-end services through rote learning methods, have now established an agri-tech incubation lab with modest funding from NEP's research grants. 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Internships and fieldwork allow students to engage with real-world problems, mix streams, and pause and continue their learning. Additionally, NEP aligns with programs like Digital India, Startup India, and Skill India. Together, these initiatives provide a holistic development model, encouraging young minds to solve national problems, start businesses, and innovate. It is no surprise that India has emerged as the world's third-largest startup ecosystem with over 100 unicorns and many more to come. Behind every startup founder is a teacher who encouraged students to ask questions, an institution that promoted exploration, and a government policy that believed in young minds. NEP systematises this support, turning random efforts into intentional ones. The most significant feature of NRF is its inclusivity. Research in India will no longer be the domain of a select few. State institutions and rural schools, with NRF subsidies, will provide local solutions to local problems with global relevance. For example, a tribal student in Odisha studying traditional herbal medicine might discover a remedy with worldwide applications. A rural engineering graduate designing irrigation equipment for small farmers could influence global food security frameworks. By integrating modern science with indigenous knowledge systems, India has the opportunity to contribute to the development goals of the Global South. Including women and marginalised groups in the knowledge generation process, validating indigenous knowledge, and conducting research in Indian languages, NEP fosters democratic development. No reform is without challenges. Implementing policies across India's vast and diverse educational landscape will face obstacles such as a shortage of trained teachers, inequalities in digital access, and administrative resistance. It is crucial to monitor results, allocate NRF funds transparently, and avoid centralising research authority. Premature commercialisation is another risk. Education must not focus solely on economic gains. Research inherently involves experimentation, exploration, failure, and long-term planning. India must balance innovation for development with research for its own sake. As we move towards 2047, Viksit Bharat must become more than a dream expressed in policy speeches. It must become a shared national project where every teacher feels appreciated, every student is motivated, and every researcher feels encouraged. With around 400 million young people, India has the power to influence not only its future but also that of the entire world. We are building the future with intellect and purpose, using NRF as the ladder of opportunity and NEP as the compass. By 2047, if we remain dedicated, it will be common to see a doctorate candidate publishing research in a tribal dialect, a startup team tackling sustainable energy issues, and a rural girl conducting experiments in a community science lab. top videos View all Transforming science into a revolution, education into freedom, and policy into purpose means we are not just creating a developed country but building a creative and thinking nation—a nation with a vision. This must be the essence of Viksit Bharat. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect News18's views. About the Author Dr Abhishek Ranjan Dr Abhishek Ranjan is Research Associate, Department of Political Science, University of Delhi. tags : National Education Policy (NEP) pm narendra modi view comments Location : New Delhi, India, India First Published: July 31, 2025, 10:16 IST News opinion Opinion | How Modi's NEP Is Fuelling India's 'Viksit Bharat' Dream Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.