Daily Current Affairs on Similipal Declared Odisha’s Second National Park (2024–25) for CAPF (AC) Exam Preparation

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Study Notes

Similipal Declared Odisha’s Second National Park (2024–25)

Context:

  • Similipal Tiger Reserve, located in Mayurbhanj district, has been officially notified as Odisha’s second national park (after Bhitarkanika).

  • It becomes the 107th national park in India under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972.


Key Details of Notification:

  • New National Park Area: 845.70 sq. km (now fully protected, rights-free zone)

    • No human habitation, agriculture, grazing, or resource extraction allowed.

  • Remaining Area: ~1,904 sq. km will function as a Wildlife Sanctuary with regulated activities.

  • The Greater Similipal Landscape Programme is being implemented to ensure:

    • Conservation of buffer zones

    • Restoration of ecological corridors for species movement

    • Community engagement in eco-development


About Similipal:

Geographical Significance:

  • Location: Northern Odisha, Mayurbhanj district

  • Coordinates: Between 21°28′N and 22°08′N latitudes, and 86°04′E and 86°37′E longitudes

  • Biogeographic Zone: Deccan Peninsula

    • Biotic Province: Chhotanagpur Plateau

    • Region: Mahanadian

  • Topography:

    • Characterized by undulating terrain, dense forests, and river valleys

    • Surrounded by eastern highlands and plateaus

    • Highest peaks: Khairiburu (1178 m) and Meghashini (1158 m)

Hydrology and Ecosystems:

  • Major rivers: Budhabalanga, Palpala, and Salandi

  • Known for scenic waterfalls such as:

    • Barehipani Falls (399 m) – second-highest waterfall in India

    • Joranda Falls (150 m)


Biodiversity Significance:

Fauna:

  • Only known natural habitat of wild melanistic tigers (black tigers) globally

  • Houses ~40 Royal Bengal Tigers, over 25% of Odisha’s elephant population

  • Home to major ungulates like:

    • Sambar (Rusa unicolor)

    • Chital (Axis axis)

    • Barking deer (Muntiacus vaginalis)

    • Gaur (Bos gaurus)

    • Mouse deer (Moschiola indica)

  • Presence of apex predators and a healthy prey base ensures robust trophic dynamics

Flora:

  • Forest types:

    • Moist deciduous, semi-evergreen, and sal-dominated tracts

  • Botanical richness:

    • Over 1,076 plant species, including 104 orchid species, many endemic to the region


Cultural and Anthropological Aspects:

  • Traditionally inhabited by tribal communities like the Santhal, Ho, Munda, and Bhumij

  • Ongoing efforts for voluntary relocation and community-based ecotourism to balance conservation with livelihood needs


Conservation Importance:

  • Similipal is part of the UNESCO World Network of Biosphere Reserves (designated in 2009)

  • Functions as a tiger source population under Project Tiger (since 1973)

  • Provides crucial connectivity to the Eastern Ghats–Chhotanagpur Elephant Landscape


Comparison with Bhitarkanika National Park:

Feature Similipal Bhitarkanika Ecosystem Type Tropical moist deciduous forest Mangrove and estuarine wetlands Key Species Melanistic tiger, elephant, orchid diversity Saltwater crocodile, Olive Ridley turtles Year of NP Status 2024 1998 Biosphere Reserve? Yes No

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