Kaziranga National Park records 30 raptor and six stork species in a rapid bird survey
Kaziranga National Park — Rapid Bird Survey (Raptors & Storks, 2026)
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve (Assam) is a UNESCO World Heritage Site (1985) famous for its one-horned rhinoceros population but equally significant as an avian biodiversity hotspot, lying at the junction of the Australasian and Indo-Asian flyways [S3].
- A rapid bird survey (Feb–Mar 2026) documented 30 raptor species and 6 stork species within the park — significant because India hosts 112 raptor species and 8 of the world's 20 tropical stork species [S1].
- Relevant for UPSC because it links biodiversity conservation, Tiger Reserve/Protected Area governance, Wildlife Protection Act, UNESCO WHC, and India's avifaunal commitments under international treaties.
- Storks and raptors are apex and indicator species — their abundance signals ecosystem health, relevant to GS-III (Environment & Ecology).
2. Why in the News
- A 10-member rapid survey team (Kaziranga Tiger Reserve authority + Gauhati University researchers) conducted a focused raptor-stork enumeration across the park's three administrative zones in the last week of February to March 2, 2026 [S1].
- Results were released on June 5, 2026 (World Environment Day) to highlight avifaunal richness alongside the park's flagship megafauna [S1].
- Survey recorded 217 individual raptors across 30 species and 266 individual storks across 6 species [S1].
3. Background & Evolution
- 1905: Area first reserved as a Proposed Reserve Forest under British administration to protect the Indian one-horned rhinoceros.
- 1974: Declared a National Park under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972.
- 1985: Inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site [S2][S3].
- 2006: Notified as a Tiger Reserve under Project Tiger (now NTCA framework).
- Avian documentation at Kaziranga has grown steadily — the park now hosts a checklist of 553+ bird species, reflecting its position at a major flyway junction [S3].
- The 2026 survey is among the first focused rapid surveys specifically targeting raptors and storks as distinct taxonomic groups, using structured zone-wise enumeration.
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Full name | Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve |
| State | Assam |
| Designated NP | 1974 (Wildlife Protection Act, 1972) |
| UNESCO WHC | 1985 [S3] |
| Tiger Reserve notified | 2006 |
| Governing Act | Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972; Forest Conservation Act, 1980 |
| Administrative zones | East Assam Wildlife Division; Biswanath Wildlife Division; Nagaon Wildlife Division [S1] |
| Total bird species | 553+ [S3] |
| Raptors (India total) | 112 species (diurnal + nocturnal) [S1] |
| Raptors in Kaziranga + adjoining landscape | ~50 species [S1] |
| Raptors recorded in 2026 survey | 30 species; 217 individuals [S1] |
| Storks globally (tropical/subtropical) | 20 species [S1] |
| Stork species in India | 8 [S1] |
| Stork species in Assam | All 8 [S1] |
| Storks recorded in 2026 survey | 6 species; 266 individuals [S1] |
| Survey period | Last week of February – March 2, 2026 [S1] |
| Survey partners | Kaziranga Tiger Reserve authority + Gauhati University [S1] |
| Flyway position | Junction of Australasian and Indo-Asian flyways [S3] |
| Threatened avifauna | Bengal Florican, Long-billed Vulture, Spot-billed Pelican, Lesser Adjutant Stork [S3] |
Zone-wise breakdown:
| Zone | Raptor species | Stork species |
|---|---|---|
| East Assam Wildlife Division | 21 | 5 |
| Biswanath Wildlife Division | 20 | 6 |
| Nagaon Wildlife Division | 14 | 5 |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Environmental
- Raptors are apex predators and keystone species — their presence confirms intact food webs and prey base (rodents, reptiles, fish, smaller birds) within Kaziranga [S1].
- Storks, especially the Lesser Adjutant, function as scavengers and wetland indicators; six stork species suggest healthy wetland-grassland mosaics in the Brahmaputra floodplain [S3].
- Assam's wetlands and Himalayan foothills are critical habitats; any degradation (flood mismanagement, encroachment) directly threatens these obligate habitat specialists [S1].
- India's commitment under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (2022) — protecting 30% of land/sea by 2030 — makes raptor-rich reserves like Kaziranga strategically central.
Legal / Constitutional
- Kaziranga is protected under Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 — conferring the highest level of legal protection to its fauna including all raptors and storks.
- Section 38V of WPA, 1972 governs Tiger Reserve notification; NTCA exercises oversight.
- Several raptors (e.g., White-rumped Vulture, Long-billed Vulture) are IUCN Critically Endangered — bringing in obligations under CITES (Appendix II) [S3].
Scientific / Technological
- Rapid Survey methodology (structured transect + point-count within a defined timeframe) enables repeatable, comparable baseline data — essential for long-term trend monitoring.
- Collaboration model (protected area authority + university) is the emerging standard for citizen-science-augmented biodiversity inventories under India's Wildlife Institute of India protocols.
- India is home to 112 raptor species — one of the highest diversities globally; Kaziranga alone covers ~27% of national raptor diversity [S1].
Administrative
- Three-zone administrative model allows differential management intensity; Biswanath recorded the highest stork diversity (all 6 species) suggesting it harbours the best wetland quality [S1].
- Survey was timed (February–March) to capture winter migrants as well as resident breeding species — methodological rigour worth noting.
- Results released on World Environment Day (June 5) — aligns with India's messaging obligations under UNEP's annual WED framework.
Social / Ethical
- Gauhati University partnership integrates academic capacity building and ensures survey credibility through peer scrutiny.
- Raptor and stork watching is a growing ecotourism niche — data from such surveys can inform community-based tourism around Kaziranga's buffer zones.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Feb–Mar 2026: Rapid raptor-stork survey conducted by Kaziranga Tiger Reserve + Gauhati University team [S1].
- June 5, 2026 (World Environment Day): Survey results released publicly [S1].
- 2025: IUCN World Heritage Outlook assessment updated for Kaziranga, noting ongoing concern over highway (NH 37) fragmentation and flood management [S3].
- PIB has noted ongoing research tracing the evolutionary history of Kaziranga as the last great refuge of the one-horned rhino, highlighting continued scientific attention to the reserve [S4].
7. Prelims Hooks
- Kaziranga National Park was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1985. [S3]
- The 2026 rapid survey recorded 30 raptor species and 6 stork species at Kaziranga. [S1]
- India is home to 112 raptor species (both diurnal and nocturnal). [S1]
- 20 stork species are found in tropical and subtropical regions worldwide; India has 8 of them. [S1]
- All 8 stork species found in India occur in Assam; Kaziranga has recorded 6. [S1]
- The 2026 survey enumerated 217 individual raptors and 266 individual storks. [S1]
- Raptor types recorded include buzzards, eagles, falcons, owls, and vultures. [S1]
- Kaziranga lies at the junction of the Australasian and Indo-Asian flyways. [S3]
- The survey was conducted across three administrative zones: East Assam Wildlife Division, Biswanath Wildlife Division, and Nagaon Wildlife Division. [S1]
- Biswanath Wildlife Division recorded the highest stork diversity — all 6 stork species. [S1]
- Kaziranga and its adjoining landscape harbour approximately 50 raptor species out of India's 112. [S1]
- The survey was a collaboration between the Kaziranga Tiger Reserve authority and Gauhati University. [S1]
- Results were released on June 5 (World Environment Day) 2026. [S1]
- Threatened avifauna at Kaziranga includes the Bengal Florican, Long-billed Vulture, Spot-billed Pelican, and Lesser Adjutant Stork. [S3]
- Kaziranga has a total checklist of 553+ bird species. [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping: - GS-III: Environment & Ecology → Biodiversity, Conservation, Protected Areas, Wildlife management - GS-II: Governance → Role of institutions (NTCA, Wildlife Institute), Centre-State in forest/wildlife management
Specific Syllabus Headings: - Conservation of biodiversity; protected areas; species conservation - Government policies for conservation of environment
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Kaziranga National Park is often discussed only in the context of its rhinoceros population. Critically examine its significance as an avifaunal biodiversity hotspot and the challenges in integrating bird conservation with existing management priorities." 2. "Discuss the role of rapid biodiversity surveys in informing protected area management in India. Use Kaziranga's 2026 raptor-stork survey as a case study." 3. "India is home to 112 raptor species, yet raptor conservation receives far less policy attention than charismatic megafauna. Analyse the gaps in India's wildlife conservation framework from this perspective."
9. Related Topics to Study Next
- Project Tiger / NTCA — Kaziranga is a Tiger Reserve; understanding NTCA's mandate is essential.
- Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 and its Schedules — Legal basis for all species protection at Kaziranga.
- UNESCO World Heritage Convention — Kaziranga is a WHC site; criteria for nomination (Outstanding Universal Value).
- Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) / Raptors MoU — India is a signatory; raptors are covered species.
- IUCN Red List Categories — Several Kaziranga raptors (vultures) are Critically Endangered; Red List criteria frequently tested.
- Brahmaputra Floodplain Ecology — Kaziranga's wetlands and stork habitats are floodplain-dependent; flooding and erosion debates are policy-relevant.
- Central Asian Flyway & Bird Flyways of India — Connects to Kaziranga's migratory bird significance.
- Vulture Conservation in India — White-rumped, Long-billed vultures; diclofenac ban (2006); Vulture Restaurants.
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing "30 raptor species" with "India's total" — India has 112 raptor species; Kaziranga recorded 30 in the 2026 survey; the park + adjoining landscape holds ~50.
- Wrong year for UNESCO inscription — Kaziranga was inscribed 1985, not 1974 (which is when it became a National Park).
- Conflating Tiger Reserve notification year — Kaziranga became a Tiger Reserve in 2006, not 1974.
- Stork numbers — India has 8 of the world's 20 stork species; Kaziranga recorded 6 (not all 8). All 8 are found in Assam.
- Biswanath vs. East Assam for raptors — East Assam recorded the highest raptor species count (21); Biswanath recorded the highest stork diversity (6 species). These are commonly swapped.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Kaziranga National Park records 30 raptor and six stork species in a rapid bird survey" — The Hindu, June 7, 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-07/th_international/articleGC6G33JP2-14859291.ece — (Tier 4; used as primary article source)
- [S2] PIB Press Release on Kaziranga — https://www.pib.gov.in/newsite/printrelease.aspx?relid=158080 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] IUCN World Heritage Outlook — Kaziranga National Park — https://worldheritageoutlook.iucn.org/node/1003 — (Tier 2)
- [S4] PIB — "Researchers trace evolution of Kaziranga to the last great home of the one-horned rhino" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2222633 — (Tier 1)
- [S5] Britannica — Kaziranga National Park — https://www.britannica.com/place/Kaziranga-National-Park — (Tier 3)