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Archives: News

  • Bharat Taxi Initiative

    Why in the News?

    The Government of India has launched the Bharat Taxi Initiative, a cooperative-based national ride-hailing platform.

    About Bharat Taxi Initiative

    • First of its kind cooperative driven, citizen first ride hailing initiative
    • India’s first cooperative taxi network
    • Drivers become shareholders and co owners of the platform
    • Aims to provide fair income, transparency, and platform ownership to drivers

    Institutional Framework

    • Developed under the Ministry of Cooperation
    • Technical support by National e-Governance Division (NeGD)

    Promoting Institutions

    • National Cooperative Development Corporation (NCDC)
      • Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative (IFFCO)
      • AMUL
      • KRIBHCO
      • National Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Federation of India (NAFED)
      • National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD)
      • National Dairy Development Board (NDDB)
      • National Cooperative Exports Limited (NCEL)
    [2022] Consider the following: 

    1. Aarogya Setu 

    2. CoWIN 

    3. DigiLocker 

    4. DIKSHA 

    Which of the above are built on top of open-source digital platforms? 

    (a) 1 and 2 only 

    (b) 2, 3 and 4 only 

    (c) 1, 3 and 4 only 

    (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

  • Global Geological And Climatic Events

    Kavachi Volcano

    Why in the News?

    Scientists have reported rare underwater footage showing sharks living inside the crater of Kavachi volcano, near the Solomon Islands. This discovery challenges earlier assumptions about marine survival in extreme volcanic environments.

    About Kavachi Volcano

    • A shallow submarine volcano located in the South Pacific Ocean
    • Situated south of Vangunu Island in the Solomon Islands
    • Lies on the Pacific Ring of Fire, a highly tectonically active zone
    • Among the few active and visible undersea volcanoes in the world

    Volcanic Activity

    • Known for frequent but unpredictable eruptions
    • First documented eruptive activity in 1939
    • Has experienced multiple temporary island forming events

    Prelims Pointers

    • Type: Submarine volcano
    • Location: South Pacific Ocean
    • Tectonic setting: Pacific Ring of Fire
    • Key feature: Temporary island formation
    • Recent relevance: Sharks observed inside a volcanic crater

    [2024] Consider the following: 1. Pyroclastic debris 2. Ash and dust 3. Nitrogen compounds 4. Sulphur compounds. How many of the above are products of volcanic eruptions? 

    (a) Only one

    (b) Only two

    (c) Only three

    (d) All four 

  • Internal Security Architecture Shortcomings – Key Forces, NIA, IB, CCTNS, etc.

    Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB)

    Why in the News?

    The Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, extended greetings to all personnel of the Sashastra Seema Bal on its Raising Day.

    About Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB)

    • Formerly known as Special Service Bureau
    • Established: 15 March 1963
    • Background: Formed after the Sino Indian Conflict of 1962
    • Force Type: Central Armed Police Force (CAPF)
    • Administrative Control: Ministry of Home Affairs

    Mandate and Area of Responsibility

    • Guards India’s international borders with Nepal and Bhutan
    • Promotes border security awareness among border populations

    Roles and Functions

    • Prevents smuggling, illegal immigration, and transnational crimes
    • Checks unauthorised entry and exit along the border
    • Assists in border area development
      • Construction of schools, toilets, roads, and public infrastructure
    • Performs law and order duties, counter insurgency operations, and election duties
    • Participates in UN peacekeeping missions when assigned by the central government

    Prelims Pointers

    • Border responsibility: Nepal and Bhutan only
    • Under Ministry of Home Affairs, not Defence Ministry
    • Origin linked to 1962 Sino Indian War
    • Combines border guarding with community oriented development
    [2023] With reference to Home Guards, consider the following statements: 

    1. Home Guards are raised under the Home Guards Act and Rules of the Central Government. 

    2. The role of the Home Guards is to serve as an auxiliary force to the police in maintenance of internal security. 

    3. To prevent infiltration on the international border/coastal areas, the Border Wing Home Guards Battalions have been raised in some States. 

    How many of the above statements are correct? 

    (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) All three (d) None

  • Defence Sector – DPP, Missions, Schemes, Security Forces, etc.

    [20th December 2025] The Hindu OpED: Significance of a strong defense industrial base

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2021] Analyse the multidimensional challenges posed by external state and non-state actors to the internal security of India. Also discuss measures required to be taken to combat these threats.

    Linkage: This question is relevant to GS III as it examines internal security challenges posed by external state and non-state actors. The article is directly linked as it explains how a strong domestic defence industrial base enhances strategic autonomy and resilience required to effectively counter such threats.

    Why in the News

    India’s defence industrial ecosystem is undergoing a structural transition after decades of import dependence and restrictive policies. Recent reforms, opening the sector to private participation, liberalising foreign direct investment, corporatisation of legacy institutions, and expansion of indigenous procurement, have led to rapid growth in defence production and exports to over 80 countries. This marks a sharp departure from a period characterised by monopoly production, lack of competition, and structural vulnerability. 

    Introduction

    A strong defence industrial base underpins national security, economic resilience, and strategic autonomy. For India, historical policy constraints limited private sector participation and fostered import dependence, weakening both security preparedness and industrial capability. Recent reforms signal a shift towards self-reliance, export orientation, and integration with global supply chains. In an evolving global security landscape, this transition is central to India’s strategic and economic ambitions.

    Structural Constraints in India’s Defence Manufacturing

    1. Restrictive Policy Framework: Limited private participation and absence of competition constrained innovation and efficiency.
    2. Import Dependence: Excessive reliance on foreign suppliers exposed vulnerabilities in times of conflict and supply-chain disruption.
    3. Monopolistic Production Structure: Dominance of state-controlled entities reduced incentives for cost efficiency and technological upgrading.
    4. Strategic Vulnerability: Dependence on external suppliers undermined operational readiness and economic potential.

    Reform-Led Transformation of the Defence Ecosystem

    1. Private Sector Entry: Opening of defence manufacturing to private firms expanded capacity and innovation.
    2. FDI Liberalisation: Relaxed investment norms facilitated technology inflows and global integration.
      1. India permits Foreign Direct Investment up to 74% under the automatic route in defence manufacturing, which facilitates faster capital inflows and technology transfer without prior government approval.
      2. FDI beyond 74% is allowed through the government approval route in cases where it results in access to modern technology or enhances national security interests.
    3. Institutional Restructuring: Corporatisation of legacy production units improved accountability and efficiency.
    4. Indigenous Procurement Expansion: Emphasis on domestic production under the ‘Make’ procedure stimulated innovation.
    5. Export Growth: Defence exports now span more than 80 countries, reflecting ecosystem maturation.

    Global Security Environment and Strategic Opportunity

    1. Geopolitical Instability: Conflicts in Europe, West Asia, and Asia exposed fragility of global supply chains.
    2. Resilience through Domestic Capacity: Nations with strong domestic defence industries demonstrated higher strategic resilience.
    3. European Defence Reorientation: Renewed defence spending and saturation of traditional suppliers opened new markets.
    4. Cost-Effective Demand: Growing global demand for reliable and affordable defence platforms aligns with India’s strengths.
    5. Geostrategic Advantage: India’s Indian Ocean positioning and diplomatic outreach enhance export credibility.

    Procedural and Regulatory Bottlenecks

    1. Regulatory Complexity: Cumbersome licensing and approvals deter private and MSME participation.
    2. Export Licensing Delays: Slow clearances reduce competitiveness in time-sensitive global markets.
    3. Technology Transfer Approvals: Protracted processes impede collaboration and joint ventures.
    4. Investment Uncertainty: Lack of long-term demand visibility discourages large-scale private investment.

    Recalibrating Institutional Roles

    1. DRDO Reorientation: Core focus on frontier research and strategic technologies.
    2. Production Shift: Scaling and commercialisation to move increasingly towards industry.
    3. Public-Private Collaboration: Alignment with global best practices strengthens competitiveness.
    4. Export Facilitation: Dedicated, professionally staffed export facilitation agency enhances outreach and coordination.

    Financial, Testing, and Certification Challenges

    1. Credit Access Constraints: Competitive financing remains difficult for domestic manufacturers.
    2. Stringent Domestic Standards: Excessive compliance requirements delay market entry.
    3. Testing Infrastructure Gaps: Limited integrated testing facilities increase costs and timelines.
    4. Certification Barriers: Lack of international certification reduces export acceptance.

    Strategic Significance of Defence Exports

    1. Technological Maturity: Exports signal reliability and advanced manufacturing capability.
    2. Strategic Credibility: Defence supplies enhance trust and long-term security partnerships.
    3. Geopolitical Leverage: Defence trade strengthens India’s role in global security architecture.
    4. Employment Generation: High-skilled jobs contribute to economic diversification.

    Conclusion

    A strong defence industrial base is not merely an industrial objective but a defining pillar of India’s strategic and economic future. Sustained reforms, institutional clarity, and ecosystem development are essential to translate recent progress into enduring strategic capability and global influence.

    Defence Procurement Mechanism and Policies in India 

    1. Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP) governs capital procurement of defence equipment and prioritises indigenous design, development, and manufacturing.
    2. Buy (Indian-IDDM) category ensures preference to indigenously designed, developed, and manufactured defence platforms.
    3. Buy (Indian) and Buy & Make (Indian) categories facilitate domestic production with limited foreign collaboration.
    4. Make Procedure supports indigenous development of complex defence systems through industry-led design and innovation.
    5. Strategic Partnership Model enables long-term partnerships between Indian private firms and global OEMs in critical defence segments.
    6. Defence Public Sector Undertakings (DPSUs) and Ordnance Factory Corporatisation improve efficiency, accountability, and competitiveness.
    7. Defence Industrial Corridors strengthen regional manufacturing ecosystems and supply-chain integration.
    8. Offset Policy mandates technology transfer and domestic value addition in large defence contracts.
    9. FDI Liberalisation in Defence allows foreign investment to facilitate technology inflow while retaining Indian control.
    10. Export Authorisation Reforms simplify licensing procedures to promote defence exports.
    11. Negative Import Lists restrict procurement of specified defence items from abroad to encourage domestic production.
    12. Defence Testing Infrastructure Scheme expands certification and testing facilities to reduce entry barriers for domestic manufacturers.
    13. iDEX Framework integrates startups and MSMEs into defence innovation and procurement.
    14. Long-Term Integrated Perspective Plan (LTIPP) provides capability planning to align procurement with strategic requirements.
  • Nuclear Energy

    Shanti Bill: How India is overhauling its nuclear power regime

    Why in the News?

    The Sustainable Harnessing and Advancing Nuclear Energy for Transitioning India (SHANTI) Bill, 2025 was passed by Parliament, replacing two foundational laws, the Atomic Energy Act, 1962 and the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010. This marks the first comprehensive overhaul of India’s nuclear power regime since independence. 

    Introduction

    India’s nuclear energy sector has historically been characterised by exclusive state control, rigid liability provisions, and limited regulatory autonomy. While these safeguards prioritised safety, they also constrained capacity expansion, foreign collaboration, and private investment. The SHANTI BILL is significant as India targets 100 GW of nuclear capacity by 2047, compared to the present capacity of around 7.5 GW. This highlights a sharp departure from the earlier state-monopoly and supplier-deterrent framework.

    Why was the overhaul needed?

    1. Outdated legal framework: The Atomic Energy Act, 1962 and the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010 were misaligned with current energy demands, global best practices, and advanced reactor technologies.
    2. Investment deterrence: Unlimited and ambiguous supplier liability under the 2010 law discouraged private and foreign participation, slowing capacity addition.
    3. Low capacity growth: Nuclear capacity stagnated at ~7.5 GW despite long-term targets, reflecting structural bottlenecks rather than technological limits.
    4. Energy transition pressures: Rising electricity demand and climate commitments required reliable, non-fossil baseload power beyond renewables.
    5. Regulatory concerns: Lack of statutory backing for the nuclear regulator raised issues of autonomy, credibility, and public trust.

    Structural Reset of the Nuclear Power Framework

    Legislative Consolidation and Policy Shift

    1. Replacement of legacy laws: Repeals the Atomic Energy Act, 1962 and the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010.
    2. Unified governance framework: Integrates safety regulation, liability norms, and sectoral participation within a single statute.
    3. Transition objective: Aligns nuclear expansion with India’s energy transition and net-zero commitments.

    Opening the Nuclear Sector to Private Participation

    Expansion of Eligible Operators

    1. Private sector entry: Allows private entities to own and operate nuclear power plants for the first time.
    2. Scope of activities: Covers construction, transport, storage, import, export, and handling of nuclear material.
    3. Mandatory authorisation: Requires Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) approval for all nuclear-related activities.

    Continued Strategic Control

    1. Exclusive central control: Retains government monopoly over enrichment, isotope separation, spent fuel reprocessing, and radioactive waste management.
    2. Security prioritisation: Prevents dilution of national security oversight over sensitive nuclear processes.

    Recalibration of Nuclear Liability Architecture

    Graded Liability Caps

    1. Capacity-linked liability: Introduces differential liability based on reactor size.
    2. Liability limits (₹ crore):
      1. Above 3600 MW: 3000
      2. 150-3600 MW: 1500
      3. 750-1500 MW: 750
      4. 150-750 MW: 300
      5. Below 150 MW and fuel processing units: 100
    3. Policy outcome: Improves investor certainty while retaining operator accountability.

    Supplier Liability Reconfiguration

    1. Removal of “supplier” clause: Eliminates direct supplier liability from the statutory framework.
    2. Contractual recourse: Permits operators to seek compensation from suppliers only through contractual agreements.
    3. Investment impact: Addresses a key deterrent that previously discouraged foreign reactor suppliers.

    Redefining Compensation and Accountability

    Right of Recourse Rationalisation

    1. Conditional applicability: Applies only where nuclear damage results from defective equipment or services.
    2. Exclusion of operational accidents: Shields suppliers from liability arising from operational lapses.

    Financial Security Mechanisms

    1. Insurance mandate: Requires operators to maintain insurance or financial security only up to the prescribed liability cap.
    2. State-owned exemptions: Exempts installations owned by the Union government from mandatory financial security.

    Strengthening Regulatory Autonomy and Oversight

    Statutory Empowerment of AERB

    1. Legal status: Grants statutory authority to the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board.
    2. Expanded mandate: Covers safety regulation, licensing, and enforcement across nuclear installations.
    3. Institutional clarity: Addresses long-standing concerns over regulatory dependence on the executive.

    Audit and Accountability Framework

    1. CAG oversight: Places AERB’s expenditure under the Comptroller and Auditor General.
    2. Reporting structure: Requires AERB reports to be tabled before the Atomic Energy Commission.
    3. Governance outcome: Enhances transparency without compromising operational independence.

    Penal Provisions and Enforcement

    1. Monetary penalties: Introduces fines for severe safety violations.
    2. Graded punishment: Differentiates between minor and grave offences.
    3. Earlier gap addressed: Fills the absence of monetary penalties in the previous liability regime.

    Nuclear Damage Claims and Grievance Redressal

    1. Dedicated commission: Establishes a Nuclear Damage Claims Commission.
    2. Adjudicatory mechanism: Enables compensation claims beyond the operator liability framework.
    3. Appeal provision: Allows appeals to the Electricity Appellate Tribunal.

    Conclusion

    The SHANTI Bill, 2025 marks a shift towards a regulated and investment-friendly nuclear energy framework while retaining strong state control over safety and strategic functions. By reforming liability norms and strengthening regulatory oversight, it seeks to remove structural constraints on nuclear expansion. Its success will depend on effective regulation, transparency, and sustained public confidence as nuclear power grows in India’s energy mix.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] With growing energy needs should India keep on expanding its nuclear energy programme? Discuss the facts and fears associated with nuclear energy. 

    Linkage: The SHANTI Bill addresses the fears highlighted in the question, especially safety, liability, and accountability. This enables expansion of nuclear energy to meet growing energy needs through regulatory strengthening and private sector participation.

  • Child Rights – POSCO, Child Labour Laws, NAPC, etc.

    Child trafficking a deeply disturbing reality, says SC

    Why in the News

    The Supreme Court, while upholding a conviction under the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956, described child trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation as a “deeply disturbing reality” in India. 

    Introduction

    Child trafficking in India operates through organised, layered networks involving recruitment, transportation, harbouring, and exploitation. Despite statutory safeguards, judicial approaches have often been inconsistent in appreciating the lived realities of trafficked minors. The present judgment marks a reaffirmation of victim-centric adjudication, recognising the socio-economic vulnerability of trafficked children and the need for heightened judicial sensitivity while recording and assessing their evidence.

    What is child trafficking?

    • Child trafficking involves the use of children for the purpose of exploitation in various ways. It is a serious crime and a severe violation of human rights.
    • It is irrelevant whether a child appears to have “consented” in some way to being exploited, especially when force, deception, coercion, or abuse of power or vulnerability are being used.

    What are the most common forms of child trafficking?

    Vulnerable children may be exposed to many different forms of exploitation, including:

    1. Sexual exploitation: this can include abusing children for commercial sexual exploitation or the production of child sexual abuse material
    2. Forced labour: when children work under harsh conditions in various sectors, including agriculture, factories, mining or as domestic workers
    3. Begging and petty crimes: putting children to beg on streets or commit other crimes, such as theft.
    4. Children in armed conflict: children are recruited as fighters, sexually exploited, or kept in domestic servitude during a conflict
    5. Child marriage: girls are married off to third parties for money or social status, often as part of harmful traditional practices.
    6. Illegal adoption: Trafficking babies and children for illegal adoption for their exploitation, often through deception or coercion of their parents or guardians.

    Judicial Recognition of Child Trafficking as Organised Crime

    1. Organised criminal networks: Operate through complex and layered structures across recruitment, transport, harbouring, and exploitation.
    2. Diffused criminal processes: Fragmented operations make it difficult for victims to narrate events with precision or linear clarity.
    3. Systemic deception: Victims are often misled, coerced, or psychologically conditioned, undermining expectations of consistent testimony.

    Evidentiary Value of a Trafficked Child’s Testimony

    1. Sole testimony sufficiency: Conviction can rest entirely on the testimony of the victim if it is credible and convincing.
    2. Minor inconsistencies: Cannot be grounds for disbelieving a trafficked child’s evidence.
    3. Injured witness principle: Testimony of a trafficked minor carries the same evidentiary weight as that of an injured witness.

    Judicial Sensitivity in Recording Evidence

    1. Secondary victimisation: Courts must avoid processes that re-traumatise victims during trial.
    2. Sensitive appreciation: Judicial assessment must account for trauma, fear, confinement, and prolonged exploitation.
    3. Prompt protest fallacy: Victims should not be faulted for failure to immediately resist or report exploitation.

    Recognition of Socio-Economic and Cultural Vulnerability

    1. Marginalised backgrounds: Courts must consider inherent socio-economic and cultural vulnerability of trafficked minors.
    2. Structural disadvantage: Poverty, social backwardness, and gendered exploitation heighten susceptibility to trafficking.
    3. Constitutional obligation: The State bears a duty to protect children from moral and material abandonment.

    Rejection of Stereotypical Reasoning in Criminal Trials

    1. Improbability arguments: Courts must not discard testimony as “against ordinary human conduct”.
    2. Contextual realism: Judicial reasoning must reflect the lived realities of trafficked victims rather than abstract behavioural norms.
    3. Credibility assessment: Must be grounded in circumstances of confinement, coercion, and power asymmetry.

    Statutory and Constitutional Anchoring of the Judgment

    1. Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act: Upholds convictions based on victim testimony.
    2. Article 21: Reinforces protection of dignity and bodily integrity.
    3. Child protection jurisprudence: Aligns with constitutional morality and substantive justice.

    Conclusion

    The Supreme Court’s ruling reinforces a shift from procedural formalism to substantive justice in child trafficking cases. By recognising trafficked children as injured witnesses and accounting for their socio-economic vulnerability and trauma, the judgment aligns criminal adjudication with constitutional morality under Articles 21 and 23. It strengthens victim-centric justice and reaffirms the judiciary’s role in protecting vulnerable sections from secondary victimisation.

    Measures Taken to Prohibit Child Trafficking

    Legal Measures

    1. Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956: Criminalises trafficking, brothel-keeping and exploitation for prostitution.
    2. Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015: Provides for rescue, rehabilitation and reintegration of trafficked children.
    3. Indian Penal Code provisions: Sections 370 and 370A specifically criminalise trafficking and exploitation.
    4. POCSO Act, 2012: Addresses sexual exploitation and abuse of children with child-friendly trial procedures.

    Institutional and Administrative Measures

    1. Anti-Human Trafficking Units (AHTUs): Specialised units at district level for prevention, rescue and investigation.
    2. Child Welfare Committees (CWCs): Statutory bodies for care, protection and rehabilitation of rescued children.
    3. Integrated Child Protection Services (ICPS): Provides shelter, counselling, legal aid and rehabilitation support.
    4. Inter-State coordination mechanisms: Address cross-border and inter-state trafficking networks.

    Judicial Interventions

    1. Fast-track trials: Courts emphasise expeditious disposal of trafficking cases to reduce victim trauma.
    2. Victim-centric approach: Judicial insistence on sensitivity in recording testimony and evaluating evidence.

    Time-Bound Justice: Pinki v. State of Uttar Pradesh

    1. Judicial directive: The Supreme Court directed all High Courts to ensure that trials relating to child trafficking are completed within six months.
    2. Rationale: Prevents prolonged trauma, secondary victimisation and witness intimidation.
    3. Significance: Reinforces access to justice as a substantive right for trafficked children, not merely a procedural formality.

    Relevant Constitutional Provisions

    1. Article 21: Right to Life with Dignity: Guarantees protection against exploitation and mandates trauma-sensitive justice delivery.
    2. Article 23: Prohibition of Trafficking: Explicitly bans trafficking in human beings and forced labour.
    3. Article 39(e): Protection of Workers: Directs the State to prevent abuse of children due to economic necessity.
    4. Article 39(f): Child Welfare: Mandates conditions ensuring children’s healthy development, freedom and dignity.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] Development and welfare schemes for the vulnerable, by its nature, are discriminatory in approach. Do you agree? Give reasons for your answer.

    Linkage: The Supreme Court explicitly recognizes special evidentiary treatment for trafficked children based on socio-economic and cultural vulnerability. Hence, it constitutionally justified differential protection rather than formal equality.

  • Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.

    White Spot Disease

    Why in the News?

    • The Minister of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying informed the Rajya Sabha about White Spot Disease

    About White Spot Disease

    Highly contagious viral disease
    • Affects crustaceans such as prawns, yabbies, and crabs
    • Causes mass mortality in shrimp aquaculture

    Causative Agent

    White Spot Syndrome Virus (WSSV)
    Double stranded DNA virus
    Genus: Whispovirus
    Family: Nimaviridae

    Host Range

    All decapod crustaceans belonging to order Decapoda
    • Includes prawns, shrimps, lobsters, and crabs
    • Occurs in marine, brackish, and freshwater environments

    Mode of Transmission

    Vertical transmission
    From infected brood stock to post larvae
    Horizontal transmission
    Through carrier animals
    By cannibalism of infected organisms

    Geographical Distribution

    • Reported from Bangladesh and eastward from India

    Among the following organisms, which one does not belong to the class of other three? (2014)

    (a) Crab 

    (b) Mite 

    (c) Scorpion 

    (d) Spider

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-Middle East

    Hormuz Island

    Why in the News?

    • A rare natural phenomenon turned the coastlines of Hormuz Island into a blood red landscape, drawing global attention

    About Hormuz Island

    Location: Iran, on the Strait of Hormuz
    • Lies between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman
    • Situated about 8 km off the Iranian coast
    Area: 41.9 sq km
    • A hilly island with distinctive geomorphology

    Geological Features

    • Composed mainly of sedimentary rocks and volcanic ash
    • Dominant red colour due to high iron oxide content
    • Presence of hematite mineral gives the soil its deep red hue
    Ocean waves turn pink when they wash over iron rich sands

    Soil and Climate

    • Experiences low precipitation
    Soil and water are saline in nature
    • Landscape is largely barren

    Unique Identity

    • Known as Rainbow Island due to multi coloured soil
    • Sand and soil colours include red, gold, silver, and white

    Human Settlement and Livelihood

    Hormuz village is the only permanent settlement
    Fishing is the primary source of livelihood
    • Inhabited mainly by the Bandari ethnic group

    What is the importance of developing Chabahar Port by India? (2017)

    (a) India’s trade with African countries will enormously increase. 

    (b) India’s relations with oil-producing Arab countries will be strengthened. 

    (c) India will not depend on Pakistan for access to Afghanistan and Central Asia. 

    (d) Pakistan will facilitate and protect the installation of a gas pipeline between Iraq and India.

  • New Species of Plants and Animals Discovered

    Kheoni Wildlife Sanctuary

    Why in the News?

    Forest Department officially recorded sightings of two Wild Dogs (Dholes) in Kheoni Wildlife Sanctuary

    About Kheoni Wildlife Sanctuary

    Location: Madhya Pradesh
    Connectivity: Linked through corridors with Ratapani Tiger Reserve
    Vegetation Type: Dry deciduous forests

    Dhole (Asiatic Wild Dog)

    Basic Facts
    Wild canid carnivorous species
    • Known for pack hunting behaviour

    Other Names
    • Indian wild dog, Whistling dog, Red wolf, Red dog and Mountain wolf

    Habitat
    • Dense forests, Scrub forests, Steppes, Mountains and Pine forests

    Distribution
    Central Asia
    Eastern Asia
    Southeast Asia
    • In India, stronghold in Western Ghats and Eastern Ghats

    Conservation Status
    IUCN Red List: Endangered
    CITES: Appendix II
    Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Schedule II

    Recently there was a proposal to translocate some of the lions from their natural habitat in Gujarat to which one of the following sites? (2017)

    (a) Corbett National Park 

    (b) Kuno Palpur Wildlife Sanctuary 

    (c) Mudumalai Wildlife Sanctuary 

    (d) Sariska National Park

  • Water Management – Institutional Reforms, Conservation Efforts, etc.

    Freshwater Sponge

    Why in the News?

    • Scientists from Bose Institute studied freshwater sponges from the Sundarban delta
    • Identified their potential role as bioindicators of toxic metal pollution

    About Freshwater Sponges

    • Among the earliest multicellular eukaryotes
    • Play a key role in maintaining aquatic ecosystem health
    • Found in clean streams, lakes, rivers, and estuarine systems
    • Grow on sturdy submerged objects
    • Are filter feeders, filtering large volumes of water
    • Obtain food from water flow through the body and symbiotic algae

    Physical Features

    • Often appear green in colour
    • Green colour due to symbiotic algae living within sponge tissues

    Reproduction

    Sexual reproduction
    Asexual reproduction by fragmentation
    • Formation of gemmules
    Tiny, resistant reproductive bodies
    Can survive unfavourable conditions
    Germinate later to form new sponges

    Ecological Role and Significance

    • Act as bioindicators of water quality
    • Absorb toxic heavy metals such as arsenic, lead, and cadmium
    • Useful in monitoring pollution levels in freshwater and estuarine ecosystems
    • Show potential for bioremediation of polluted water bodies

    Which one of the following is a filter feeder? (2021)

    (a) Catfish 

    (b) Octopus 

    (c) Oyster 

    (d) Pelican

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