Vulture Safe Zones will be created in Tamil Nadu, State govt. tells Madras HC


Vulture Safe Zones in Tamil Nadu — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1990s Gyps vulture populations begin catastrophic collapse across South Asia; diclofenac identified as primary cause by early 2000s
2006 India, Pakistan, Nepal ban veterinary use of diclofenac sodium; Bangladesh follows in 2010 [S1]
2012 India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh adopt regional priority action plan: ban large multi-dose human diclofenac vials, test alternate NSAIDs, expand VSZ initiative [S1]
2004–08 MoEF&CC publishes Action Plan for Vulture Conservation in India (updated version uploaded 2018) [S2]
2012 onwards 12 provisional VSZs being established across India, Nepal, Bangladesh [S1]
2025–30 Tamil Nadu issues Vision Document for Vulture Conservation 2025–30; Moyar Valley VSZ announced [S4]
Jan 2026 Tamil Nadu Forest Department reports progress to Madras HC in PIL proceedings [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

Definitions & Key Terms - Vulture Safe Zone (VSZ): A ~30,000 sq km buffer area around key vulture nesting/foraging sites, declared free from veterinary diclofenac and other toxic NSAIDs. [S1] - Diclofenac: A Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug (NSAID) used to treat cattle; causes visceral gout and renal failure in Gyps vultures that feed on treated carcasses. [S1][S4] - Gyps vultures: The genus most severely affected; includes G. bengalensis (White-rumped), G. indicus (Indian/Long-billed), G. tenuirostris (Slender-billed). [S1] - Safe NSAIDs: Only meloxicam and tolfenamic acid are proven non-toxic to Gyps vultures at carcass-level concentrations. [S1]

Implementing Bodies (Tamil Nadu VSZ) - Tamil Nadu Forest Department — nodal state agency - Field Director, Mudumalai Tiger Reserve (MTR) — chairs the field-level monitoring committee [S4] - Madras High Court — judicial oversight via PIL

Enabling Framework - Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 — primary legislation for species protection - MoEF&CC Action Plan for Vulture Conservation in India [S2] - Vision Document for Vulture Conservation in Tamil Nadu 2025–30 [S4] - Drugs & Cosmetics Act — basis for banning veterinary diclofenac

Key Numbers - Population decline: ~97% collapse in Gyps vultures since 1990s [S1] - VSZ size: ~30,000 sq km per zone [S1] - Monitoring period: 2 years of scientific data generation [S5] - Carcass sampling target: ~800 carcasses to be tested for banned NSAIDs [S5] - Monitoring radius around Moyar nesting site: 100 km [S5] - Provisional VSZs globally (India/Nepal/Bangladesh): 12 [S1]

Location of First Tamil Nadu VSZ - Moyar River Valley, Nilgiris Biosphere Reserve, Tamil Nadu (within Mudumalai Tiger Reserve zone) [S4]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Scientific / Technological

Governance / Administrative

Geopolitical / Strategic

Social


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Diclofenac was banned for veterinary use in India in 2006; India was the first country to do so, followed by Pakistan and Nepal the same year. [S1]
  2. Bangladesh joined the diclofenac ban in 2010. [S1]
  3. A Vulture Safe Zone covers approximately 30,000 sq km around key nesting sites. [S1]
  4. Tamil Nadu's first VSZ will be established around Moyar River Valley in the Nilgiris Biosphere Reserve. [S4]
  5. The monitoring committee for Tamil Nadu's VSZ is chaired by the Field Director of Mudumalai Tiger Reserve. [S4]
  6. Only meloxicam and tolfenamic acid are confirmed safe NSAIDs for Gyps vultures. [S1]
  7. Nimesulide (another NSAID) has been confirmed toxic to Gyps vultures — it is NOT a safe substitute. [S1]
  8. India's Gyps vulture populations declined by approximately 97% since the 1990s. [S1]
  9. The 12 provisional VSZs are being established across India, Nepal, and Bangladesh. [S1]
  10. The Tamil Nadu VSZ initiative is governed by the Vision Document for Vulture Conservation in Tamil Nadu 2025–30. [S4]
  11. White-rumped Vulture (Gyps bengalensis) is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List. [S1]
  12. The Moyar Valley hosts Indian Vulture (Gyps indicus) breeding colonies — documented nesting records in the Mysore–Nilgiri Corridor. [S5]
  13. Pakistan's Thar region was identified as a Vulture Safe Zone in 2019. [S1]
  14. The PIL in Madras HC that triggered the state's VSZ announcement was filed by K. Surya Kumar of Vandalur, Chennai. [S4]
  15. MoEF&CC's Action Plan for Vulture Conservation in India is the central government's primary policy document for vulture protection. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Environment & Ecology — Biodiversity, conservation of endangered species, wildlife management
GS-II Governance — Role of judiciary (PIL, Judicial Environmentalism); Center-State relations in wildlife management
GS-III Science & Technology — Veterinary drug regulation, One Health framework

Plausible Mains Question Stems

  1. "Vulture Safe Zones represent a model of integrating regulatory, scientific, and community-based approaches to biodiversity conservation. Critically examine their design and implementation challenges in India." (GS-III, 250 words)
  2. "The collapse of vulture populations in India illustrates how veterinary drug regulation has cascading ecological and public health consequences. Analyse with reference to the One Health framework." (GS-III, 150 words)
  3. "Examine the role of Public Interest Litigation in catalysing state-level wildlife conservation action, with reference to the Madras High Court's intervention on Vulture Safe Zones." (GS-II, 150 words)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
IUCN Red List categories All three major Gyps vultures (bengalensis, indicus, tenuirostris) are Critically Endangered — standard Prelims fact
Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 (Schedules) VSZs derive enforcement teeth from Schedule I listing of vultures
One Health Framework Veterinary NSAID → vulture death → dog/rat explosion → human rabies — classic One Health cascade
Nilgiris Biosphere Reserve Site of Tamil Nadu's first VSZ; first UNESCO-MAB Biosphere Reserve in India (1986)
Diclofenac ban & Drug Regulation Drugs & Cosmetics Act application to veterinary drugs; multi-dose human vials loophole
Judicial Environmentalism / Green PIL Madras HC VSZ PIL is a recent example; links to M.C. Mehta cases, NGT jurisdiction
Project Vulture (MoEF&CC) National captive breeding programme at Pinjore (Haryana), Bhopal, Rani (Assam) — complements VSZ
South Asian Biodiversity Cooperation IUCN South Asia Vulture Recovery Programme — model for cross-border species conservation

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry for drug ban: The veterinary diclofenac ban was effected through the Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (under Drugs & Cosmetics Act), not MoEF&CC — though MoEF&CC co-owns the conservation action plan.
  2. Confusion between "banned" and "safe" NSAIDs: Aspirants often list meloxicam as banned — it is actually the approved safe substitute; diclofenac and nimesulide are the toxic/banned ones.
  3. VSZ size: Often confused as a "sanctuary" or "protected area" under WPA — VSZs are drug-free buffer management zones, not statutory protected areas under Schedule of WPA.
  4. Nilgiris Biosphere Reserve ≠ Mudumalai Tiger Reserve: Mudumalai is a component reserve within the larger Nilgiris BR; the monitoring committee chair is the MTR Field Director, but the VSZ is framed within the Nilgiris BR context.
  5. Vulture species confusion: Gyps bengalensis (White-rumped) ≠ Gyps indicus (Indian/Long-billed) ≠ Gyps tenuirostris (Slender-billed) — all three are Critically Endangered but distinct species; Moyar Valley specifically hosts G. indicus breeding colonies.

11. Sources