| Relevance: GS Paper III (Environment — Biodiversity, Conservation) & GS Paper II (Statutory Bodies) | Source: ANIIDCO committee minutes / news, June 2026 |
1 · What happened
| The Zoological Survey of India (ZSI) has picked four new sites on the west coast of Great Nicobar to which it will shift live corals and giant clams. These corals lie near Galathea Bay, where the government is building a huge international shipping port as part of the Great Nicobar Island mega-project.
Moving the corals first is a condition of the project’s environmental clearance — the work must be done before any construction begins. The plan is to move 16,150 coral colonies and tag each one to track if it survives. But scientists are sharply divided on whether a living reef can really be moved and survive elsewhere. |
2 · The Story So Far
First, what is a coral — and what is “translocation”?
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| 1 | Survey & count. ZSI surveys the reef near Galathea Bay. Of 20,668 colonies found, 16,150 (in shallow water up to 15 m) are marked to be moved. The deeper 4,518 need more study. |
| 2 | Move to four new sites. The corals and giant clams are shifted to four chosen spots on the island’s west coast. |
| 3 | GPS-tag & monitor. A GPS tag is fixed on each colony so its survival can be tracked over time. |
| 4 | Only then, build. Port construction may begin after the corals are safely moved — as the clearance conditions require. |
Why many scientists are worried.
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3 · The Protection, the Legal Fight and the Challenges
- Strong legal protection: corals and giant clams sit in Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 — the highest level of protection. So ZSI needs formal legal approvals even to touch or move them.
- The court fight: the Centre said no corals lie on the exact port site; activists used the government’s own ICRZ 2019 (Island Coastal Regulation Zone) maps to argue corals are present, and that clearing them for a port is not allowed. On 16 February 2026, the National Green Tribunal (NGT) dismissed their plea but ordered strict protection of the reefs.
- The turtles too: Galathea Bay is one of the world’s most important nesting beaches for leatherback sea turtles. A recent survey reportedly found around 141 nests, and experts want the turtles satellite-tagged before work starts.
- A rich, fragile island: Great Nicobar is a biodiversity treasure — home to the endemic Nicobar Megapode, saltwater crocodiles, the Nicobar macaque and the giant Robber (Coconut) Crab. The project will also cut down an estimated 8.5 lakh trees.
- Way ahead: the real test is honest, independent science — third-party audits of how many corals actually survive, turtle tagging first, and long-term GPS monitoring as a model for “build and conserve.”
| UPSC Value Box | ||||||||||||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to corals and conservation bodies, consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (b) 1 and 3 only
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