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
- Vulture Safe Zones (VSZs) are geographically defined areas (~30,000 sq km each) declared free from vulture-toxic veterinary drugs, particularly diclofenac (an NSAID), to enable vulture population recovery. [S1]
- India's Gyps vulture populations collapsed by ~97% since the 1990s — one of the fastest declines of any bird species globally — making this a flagship biodiversity crisis. [S1]
- Tamil Nadu has formally committed to establishing VSZs, with the first VSZ centred on Moyar River Valley, Nilgiris Biosphere Reserve, making this a significant state-level conservation action with High Court oversight. [S4]
- UPSC relevance: intersects GS-III (Biodiversity, Environment), GS-II (Governance, PIL/Judiciary), and the One Health framework linking veterinary drug regulation to ecosystem health.
2. Why in the News
- January 15, 2026: Tamil Nadu Forest Department filed a status report before the Madras High Court (Division Bench: Chief Justice Manindra Mohan Shrivastava + Justice G. Arul Murugan), informing the court of steps initiated to establish VSZs. [S4]
- The report was filed in response to a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) by Chennai-based (Vandalur) K. Surya Kumar (through counsel S.P. Chockalingam) seeking protection of carrion-eating vultures facing mass deaths. [S4]
- Principal Chief Conservator of Forests-cum-Chief Wildlife Warden Rakesh Kumar Dogra submitted the status report; cited the Vision Document for Vulture Conservation in Tamil Nadu 2025–30 as the policy framework. [S4]
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] |
- Predecessor initiative: IUCN/BirdLife South Asia Vulture Recovery Programme — a multi-country effort with Regional Steering Committee meetings (6th held in Nepal, 2017) coordinating VSZ rollout. [S3]
- Moyar Valley has a documented breeding record of Indian Vulture (Gyps indicus) and hosts White-backed, Long-billed, King, and Egyptian Vultures in the Mysore–Nilgiri Corridor. [S5]
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
- Vultures are obligate scavengers performing critical ecosystem services — rapid carcass disposal prevents spread of anthrax, rabies, and bovine TB; each vulture effectively replaces costly carcass-removal infrastructure. [S1]
- Loss of vultures led to feral dog and rat population explosion in India, increasing rabies transmission — a documented secondary ecological cascade. [S1]
- Nilgiris Biosphere Reserve (first in India under UNESCO-MAB, 1986) provides a legally protected matrix for the first Tamil Nadu VSZ. [S4]
- NSAID contamination in carcasses persists even after the 2006 ban; nimesulide (another NSAID) has been confirmed toxic to Gyps vultures in recent studies, expanding the threat beyond diclofenac. [S1]
Legal / Constitutional
- PIL jurisdiction: Madras HC Division Bench is supervising the VSZ rollout — a significant instance of judicial environmentalism compelling state action. [S4]
- Veterinary diclofenac ban (2006) under Drugs & Cosmetics Act — but enforcement gaps persist (large multi-dose human diclofenac vials used in veterinary practice). [S1]
- The Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 (Schedule I) protects Gyps vultures; trade or harm is a cognisable offence. [S2]
- India's obligations under Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) and Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) provide international legal impetus. [S1]
Scientific / Technological
- Toxicology testing protocol: 800 carcass samples within 100-km radius of Moyar will be analysed for residual NSAID levels. [S5]
- Only two veterinary NSAIDs — meloxicam and tolfenamic acid — cleared as safe for Gyps species; substitution advocacy is central to VSZ strategy. [S1]
- Breeding biology monitoring: Moyar Valley holds nesting colonies; nest-site surveys and productivity counts are standard VSZ monitoring metrics. [S5]
- Satellite/GPS tagging of vultures is used in pan-India monitoring to track range and carcass-use patterns (standard MoEF&CC protocol). [S2]
Governance / Administrative
- Multi-level coordination: Field Director MTR (field), PCCF-cum-Chief Wildlife Warden (state), MoEF&CC (national), IUCN/BirdLife (international). [S4][S3]
- Strict vigil on veterinarians to prevent banned NSAID use — enforcement challenge given informal rural veterinary practice. [S4]
- The Tamil Nadu VSZ is one of the first southern-India VSZs; earlier VSZs concentrated in central/north India (Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan) and South Asia (Nepal, Pakistan). [S3]
- Monitoring committee chaired by MTR Field Director already constituted as of January 2026. [S4]
Geopolitical / Strategic
- South Asia Vulture Recovery Programme (IUCN-led) coordinates VSZs across India, Nepal, Pakistan, Bangladesh — a rare cross-border biodiversity cooperation framework. [S3]
- Pakistan's Thar identified as a VSZ (2019) — regional momentum building. [S1]
- India's South Asian leadership in banning diclofenac (2006) influenced regional policy; 12-country coordination now standard. [S3]
Social
- Vulture decline is linked to Parsi community (Zoroastrian) funerary practices (Towers of Silence) — a unique socio-religious dimension with cultural rights implications. [S2]
- Rural livestock farmers depend on vultures for free carcass disposal; their decline increases cost burden on pastoral communities. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 15, 2026: Tamil Nadu Forest Department files status report in Madras HC PIL (K. Surya Kumar v. State), announcing commencement of VSZ establishment process; Moyar River Valley identified as first VSZ site. [S4]
- 2025: Tamil Nadu releases Vision Document for Vulture Conservation 2025–30 — the first State-level multi-year vulture conservation roadmap in peninsular India. [S4]
- 2025: Field-level monitoring committee constituted under MTR Field Director for Moyar VSZ. [S4]
- 2023 (study): Nimesulide confirmed toxic to Gyps vultures — expanding the list of banned-NSAID candidates beyond diclofenac. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- 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]
- Bangladesh joined the diclofenac ban in 2010. [S1]
- A Vulture Safe Zone covers approximately 30,000 sq km around key nesting sites. [S1]
- Tamil Nadu's first VSZ will be established around Moyar River Valley in the Nilgiris Biosphere Reserve. [S4]
- The monitoring committee for Tamil Nadu's VSZ is chaired by the Field Director of Mudumalai Tiger Reserve. [S4]
- Only meloxicam and tolfenamic acid are confirmed safe NSAIDs for Gyps vultures. [S1]
- Nimesulide (another NSAID) has been confirmed toxic to Gyps vultures — it is NOT a safe substitute. [S1]
- India's Gyps vulture populations declined by approximately 97% since the 1990s. [S1]
- The 12 provisional VSZs are being established across India, Nepal, and Bangladesh. [S1]
- The Tamil Nadu VSZ initiative is governed by the Vision Document for Vulture Conservation in Tamil Nadu 2025–30. [S4]
- White-rumped Vulture (Gyps bengalensis) is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List. [S1]
- The Moyar Valley hosts Indian Vulture (Gyps indicus) breeding colonies — documented nesting records in the Mysore–Nilgiri Corridor. [S5]
- Pakistan's Thar region was identified as a Vulture Safe Zone in 2019. [S1]
- The PIL in Madras HC that triggered the state's VSZ announcement was filed by K. Surya Kumar of Vandalur, Chennai. [S4]
- 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
- "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)
- "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)
- "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
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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
- [S1] "Adapt or die: lessons from Vulture Conservation in South Asia" — IUCN — https://iucn.org/content/adapt-or-die-lessons-vulture-conservation-south-asia — (Tier 2)
- [S2] "Action Plan for Vulture Conservation in India" — MoEF&CC — https://moef.gov.in/uploads/2018/03/vulture_plan.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "South Asia Vulture Recovery Programme's sixth Regional Steering Committee meeting held" — IUCN — https://iucn.org/news/nepal/201707/south-asia-vulture-recovery-programme%E2%80%99s-sixth-regional-steering-committee-meeting-held — (Tier 2)
- [S4] "Vulture Safe Zones will be created in Tamil Nadu, State govt. tells Madras HC" — The Hindu, January 15, 2026 (primary article excerpt provided) — (Tier 4)
- [S5] "The Availability of Vulture-toxic NSAIDs in the proposed Vulture Safe Zone of Moyar Valley in Tamil Nadu" — ResearchGate — https://www.researchgate.net/publication/376520066 — (reference/research)