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A wildlife association that helped conserve the Nilgiris’ biodiversity


What Happened

  • A recent report profiled the Nilgiri Wildlife and Environment Association (NWEA), widely regarded as India's first wildlife conservation organisation, tracing its origins to colonial-era hunting culture in the Nilgiris.
  • The NWEA was established in 1877 as the "Nilgiris Game Association" by British colonists who found the Nilgiri hills to be a "hunters' paradise."
  • In 1879, as a direct result of the association's advocacy, the Nilgiris Game and Fish Preservation Act was passed by the Government of Madras — one of India's earliest wildlife protection legislations.
  • After the adoption of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 by the Tamil Nadu Government in 1975, the association transformed its objective from controlled shooting to total wildlife conservation and environmental preservation, renaming itself the NWEA in 1976.
  • Major Richard Radcliff, a famous hunter-turned-conservationist, led the association in the creation of Mukurthi National Park to protect the endangered Nilgiri tahr.
  • The NWEA received the Rajiv Gandhi Wildlife Conservation Award in 2003 for its outstanding conservation efforts.

Static Topic Bridges

Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve — India's First Biosphere Reserve

The Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve (NBR) was established in September 1986, making it the first biosphere reserve in India under UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere (MAB) Programme. It was included in the UNESCO World Network of Biosphere Reserves in 2000. The reserve spans three southern Indian states and encompasses some of the most biodiverse forests in the Western Ghats.

  • Total area: 5,520 sq km spread across Tamil Nadu (2,537.6 sq km), Karnataka (1,527.4 sq km), and Kerala (1,455.4 sq km)
  • Contains key protected areas: Mudumalai National Park, Bandipur National Park, Nagarhole National Park, Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary, Mukurthi National Park, and Silent Valley National Park
  • India currently has 18 biosphere reserves, of which 12 are part of the UNESCO MAB World Network
  • Key species: Asian elephant, Bengal tiger, Nilgiri tahr, Nilgiri langur, lion-tailed macaque
  • 316 of the 334 butterfly species found in the Western Ghats have been recorded in NBR

Connection to this news: The NWEA has been active in the Nilgiri region since 1877 — over a century before the biosphere reserve was formally established — contributing to the conservation culture that eventually led to the area's designation as India's first biosphere reserve.

Western Ghats — Biodiversity Hotspot and UNESCO World Heritage Site

The Western Ghats, also known as the Sahyadri, are one of the 36 global biodiversity hotspots identified by Conservation International. The mountain range runs roughly 1,600 km parallel to India's western coast through six states (Gujarat, Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu). The Western Ghats were inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2012 under natural criteria (ix) and (x), recognising their outstanding universal value for biological diversity.

  • Recognised as one of the world's 8 "hottest" biodiversity hotspots
  • Over 5,000 flowering plant species, with 54% of tree species being endemic (352 of 650)
  • 179 amphibian species (65% endemic), 157 reptile species (62% endemic), 219 freshwater fish species (53% endemic)
  • UNESCO inscription in 2012 covers 39 serial component parts across the states of Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, and Maharashtra
  • The Gadgil Committee (2011) and Kasturirangan Committee (2013) reports made recommendations on ecologically sensitive areas (ESAs) in the Western Ghats

Connection to this news: The Nilgiris, where the NWEA has been active, form one of the most ecologically significant sub-regions of the Western Ghats, harbouring numerous endemic species that the association has helped protect over nearly 150 years.

Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 — Transformation of Conservation Approach

The Wildlife Protection Act (WLPA), 1972 was the first comprehensive legislation for wildlife conservation in independent India. It established a legal framework for the protection of wild animals, birds, and plants and created a system of protected areas. The Act was amended significantly in 1991, 2002, and 2006, with the 2006 amendment introducing Chapter IV-B on tiger conservation.

  • Provides for five categories of protected areas: National Parks (Section 35), Wildlife Sanctuaries (Section 18), Conservation Reserves (Section 36A), Community Reserves (Section 36C), and Tiger Reserves (Chapter IV-B)
  • Schedules I through VI classify species by protection level — Schedule I species have the highest protection
  • Established the National Board for Wildlife (NBWL) under Section 5A (chaired by the Prime Minister)
  • National Wildlife Action Plan first adopted in 1983, revised in 2002 and 2017
  • The Act replaced a patchwork of colonial and post-colonial provincial laws, including acts like the Nilgiris Game and Fish Preservation Act of 1879

Connection to this news: The WLPA's adoption by Tamil Nadu in 1975 was the inflection point that transformed the NWEA from a game association regulating hunting into a conservation body committed to wildlife protection, reflecting the broader national shift from colonial hunting culture to scientific conservation.

Mukurthi National Park and the Nilgiri Tahr

Mukurthi National Park, located in the western part of the Nilgiri Hills in Tamil Nadu, was established primarily to protect the Nilgiri tahr (Nilgiritragus hylocrius), an endangered mountain ungulate endemic to the southern Western Ghats. The area was first declared a wildlife sanctuary in 1982 and upgraded to a National Park on October 15, 1990.

  • Area: 78.46 sq km in the Nilgiri district, Tamil Nadu
  • The Nilgiri tahr is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List and is in Schedule I of the WLPA, 1972
  • Endemic to the high-altitude grasslands (shola-grassland ecosystem) of the Western Ghats in Tamil Nadu and Kerala
  • Tamil Nadu's state animal
  • Project Nilgiri Tahr launched by Tamil Nadu Government in October 2023 — includes shola grassland restoration, radio-collaring, health monitoring, and captive breeding plans
  • The NWEA, under Major Richard Radcliff (hunter-turned-conservationist), played a key role in advocating for the creation of this protected area

Connection to this news: The NWEA's role in establishing Mukurthi National Park exemplifies the broader conservation legacy of the association — an institution that evolved from managing colonial game hunting to championing species-specific conservation programmes.

Key Facts & Data

  • NWEA established: 1877 (as Nilgiris Game Association); renamed NWEA in 1976
  • Nilgiris Game and Fish Preservation Act: 1879, passed by Government of Madras
  • Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve: India's first biosphere reserve, established September 1986; area 5,520 sq km; UNESCO MAB designation in 2000
  • Western Ghats UNESCO World Heritage Site inscription: 2012
  • Mukurthi National Park: 78.46 sq km; sanctuary 1982, national park 1990
  • Nilgiri tahr IUCN status: Endangered; WLPA Schedule: I
  • NWEA received Rajiv Gandhi Wildlife Conservation Award: 2003
  • India's total biosphere reserves: 18 (12 in UNESCO MAB World Network)