Relevance (UPSC): GS-III – Environment; International Conventions

The latest update of the Red List by the International Union for Conservation of Nature warns that several Arctic seals and seabirds face a higher risk of extinction. Shrinking sea-ice, warming waters and shifting prey are lowering breeding success, changing migration, and leaving pups under-nourished.

Auxiliary facts about the International Union for Conservation of Nature and its Red List

  • A global union (founded 1948; head office in Gland, Switzerland) of governments, civil bodies and experts.
  • The Red List of Threatened Species uses set criteria to place species from Least Concern to Critically Endangered; it guides laws, protected areas, and trade controls.
  • Red List assessments are scientific advice, not law, but governments often align actions to them.

Why India should care

  • Arctic shifts can alter monsoon links and fish availability. India is an observer in polar bodies and invests in Arctic research stations and expeditions.

What policy can do

  • Support global cuts in greenhouse gases; join sea-ice and oil-spill monitoring; protect forage fish and seabird islands along migratory flyways in Indian waters.

Key terms: Red List category (risk label), flyway (long migration route), ecosystem tipping point (sudden change after a threshold).

Exam hook – UPSC Prelims
The primary purpose of the Red List is to: (a) run protected areas, (b) control wildlife trade, (c) assess global extinction risk using set criteria, (d) collect zoo records.
Answer: (c).

One-line wrap: The Arctic is our early alarm—its seals and birds signal climate stress for everyone.

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