Indore Poised to Become India's First City with 4 Wildlife Sanctuaries within 150 km: Current Affairs November 2025 | Atharva Examwise

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Introduction: A Historic Wildlife Conservation Milestone for Madhya Pradesh

Madhya Pradesh continues to strengthen its position as India's Tiger State with a groundbreaking announcement that places Indore on the national wildlife conservation map. Chief Minister Dr. Mohan Yadav recently declared the creation of Omkareshwar Wildlife Sanctuary, spanning 611-614 square kilometers across Khandwa and Dewas districts. This declaration, made during the state's 70th Foundation Day celebrations, marks a transformative moment not just for wildlife conservation but also for regional tourism and ecological preservation.​

What makes this development particularly significant is that Indore will become India's first city to have four wildlife sanctuaries within a 150-kilometer radius. This unique distinction positions the commercial capital of Madhya Pradesh as an emerging hub for wildlife tourism, combining urban development with ecological consciousness—a model that could inspire similar initiatives across India.

The Four Sanctuaries: Creating a Wildlife Conservation Corridor around Indore

1. Ralamandal Wildlife Sanctuary

Established in 1989, Ralamandal Wildlife Sanctuary is the oldest protected area near Indore, located just 12 kilometers from the city center. Spread over 5 square kilometers, this compact sanctuary was originally the hunting ground of the Holkar royal family.​

Key Features:

Wildlife: Leopards, black bucks, chitals (spotted deer), blue bulls, hyenas, barking deer, peacocks, palm civets, porcupines, and hares​

Flora: Teak, saja, sandalwood, eucalyptus, babul, and bamboo​

Conservation Measures: A green wall of approximately 8,000-10,000 trees has been created to protect animals from noise and air pollution from the nearby highway​

Tourism Infrastructure: Trekking trails, camel rides, rest houses, and safari facilities​

2. Kheoni (Khiwni) Wildlife Sanctuary

Located in Kannod Tehsil of Dewas district, approximately 120-125 kilometers from Indore, Kheoni Wildlife Sanctuary spans 132 square kilometers and has emerged as a prime destination for tiger spotting.​

Key Features:

Wildlife: Tigers (migrated from Ratapani), leopards in significant numbers, jungle cats, jackals, striped hyenas, nilgai, blackbuck, chinkara, chital, sambar, wild boar, barking deer, four-horned antelope, and palm civet​

Avian Diversity: Approximately 125 bird species including the state bird—Indian paradise flycatcher—along with plum-headed parakeets, Eurasian collared doves, and black drongos​

Connectivity: Connected to Ratapani Tiger Reserve through wildlife corridors​

Tourism: Forest rest houses available with prior booking; both private vehicle and guided safari options​

3. Omkareshwar Wildlife Sanctuary (Newly Announced)

The 27th wildlife sanctuary of Madhya Pradesh and potentially the 11th tiger reserve, Omkareshwar Sanctuary spans 611-614 square kilometers across Khandwa and Dewas districts.​

Key Features:

Tiger Population: Home to over 50 tigers, this sanctuary will help ease overcrowding in established reserves like Kanha, Bandhavgarh, and Pench​

Strategic Location: Situated in the sacred Narmada valley near the famous Omkareshwar Jyotirlinga temple, approximately 77 kilometers from Indore​

Ecological Significance: Created as compensatory measure for forest land diverted during the Indira Sagar and Sardar Sarovar dam projects in the 1980s—a commitment fulfilled after nearly 40 years

Future Plans: The Madhya Pradesh government plans to introduce rhinos and Indian bison (gaur) from Assam, along with king cobras​

Infrastructure: 73 forest buildings, 12 watchtowers, and 88 staff members including beat guards and range officers ensure operational readiness​

4. Devi Ahilyabai Sanctuary (Proposed)

Named after the revered Queen Devi Ahilyabai Holkar, this proposed sanctuary will span the Tillor (Choral) to Badwah forest region, covering approximately 6,000-6,700 hectares.​

Current Status:

The proposal has received approval from the Principal Chief Conservator of Forests (Wildlife)

Awaiting final approval from the State Wildlife Board before being forwarded to the Supreme Court-appointed empowered committee for notification​

Wildlife Presence:

Tigers: 5 to 7 individuals

Leopards: Approximately 70

Herbivores: Hundreds of chital, sambar, krishnamrig (blackbuck), nilgai, wild boar, chinkara

Other Species: Bhedki (barking deer), foxes, hyenas, peacocks, wild rabbits​

Wildlife Tourism Potential: Economic and Ecological Benefits

Tourism Infrastructure Development

The establishment of four sanctuaries around Indore creates unprecedented opportunities for wildlife tourism development. Wildlife experts predict that Indore will serve as a tourist base camp, with visitors having multiple sanctuary options within easy reach.​

Expected Tourism Benefits:

Eco-tourism Growth: Development of village tourism, resorts, and hotels around sanctuary areas​

Local Employment: Job creation for local communities as safari guides, lodge operators, hospitality staff, and handicraft sellers​

Revenue Generation: Entry fees, accommodation charges, and safari bookings will generate substantial revenue for wildlife conservation​

International Attraction: Unlike the current 5,000-6,000 international tourists visiting Madhya Pradesh's tiger reserves, the potential is significantly higher with improved infrastructure​

Additional Wildlife Access from Indore

Beyond the four nearby sanctuaries, Indore-based tourists can also access:

Gandhi Sagar Wildlife Sanctuary: Located 255 kilometers from Indore, this sanctuary has become the second home for cheetahs in India after Kuno National Park​

Ratapani Tiger Reserve: Recently declared as Madhya Pradesh's 8th tiger reserve (in-principle approval received in 2008)​

This creates a comprehensive wildlife tourism circuit with Indore as the central hub, offering unparalleled diversity in a compact geographical area.

Conservation Significance: Protecting Madhya Pradesh's Ecological Heritage

Addressing Tiger Population Pressure

Madhya Pradesh is home to 785 tigers as per the Tiger Census 2022, the highest in India, surpassing Karnataka's 563. However, approximately 30% of these tigers roam outside designated reserves, creating human-wildlife conflict situations.​

The Omkareshwar Sanctuary will:

Provide additional habitat for tigers dispersing from overcrowded reserves

Create wildlife corridors between existing protected areas

Reduce human-wildlife conflict by offering secure habitats away from human settlements​

Biodiversity Preservation

The sanctuaries around Indore represent diverse ecosystems:

Dry deciduous forests with teak, tendu, bamboo, and sal trees​

Riverine ecosystems along the Narmada and Chambal rivers​

Grassland habitats supporting herbivore populations​

Rocky terrain creating unique microclimates​

This diversity supports varied wildlife populations, contributing to genetic diversity and ecosystem resilience—critical factors for long-term conservation success.

Compensatory Afforestation Commitment Fulfilled

The Omkareshwar Sanctuary fulfills a decades-old environmental commitment. When the Indira Sagar and Sardar Sarovar dam projects diverted 41,111 hectares of forest land in the 1980s, environmental clearance mandated creation of compensatory protected areas. The notification of Omkareshwar Sanctuary nearly 40 years later represents:​

Government accountability in environmental commitments

Recognition of ecological debt

Model for compensatory conservation across India​

Impact on Local Communities and Regional Development

Employment and Livelihood Opportunities

The sanctuary network will create diverse employment opportunities:

Direct Employment: Forest guards, range officers, wildlife guides, safari drivers, veterinarians

Indirect Employment: Hotel and resort staff, transportation services, local handicraft artisans, food vendors

Entrepreneurship: Opportunities for eco-lodges, homestays, adventure tourism operators​

Infrastructure Development

Supporting infrastructure expected to develop includes:

Improved road connectivity to sanctuary entry points

Tourist information centers

Accommodation facilities ranging from budget guesthouses to luxury eco-resorts

Medical and emergency facilities

Communication networks​

Community-Based Conservation

Successful wildlife conservation requires local community participation. Benefits include:

Reduced Human-Wildlife Conflict: Proper fencing and defined sanctuary boundaries protect both wildlife and human settlements​

Revenue Sharing: Entry fees and tourism revenue can be partially allocated to local village development

Education and Awareness: Wildlife education programs in nearby villages create conservation consciousness​

The Broader Context: Madhya Pradesh's Wildlife Conservation Leadership

India's Tiger State

Madhya Pradesh has consistently demonstrated leadership in wildlife conservation:

9 Tiger Reserves: Kanha, Pench, Bandhavgarh, Satpura, Panna, Sanjay-Dubri, Veerangana Durgavati, Ratapani, and Madhav (most recent)​

27 Wildlife Sanctuaries: With Omkareshwar becoming the newest addition​

12 National Parks protecting diverse ecosystems​

Project Cheetah: Reintroducing Extinct Species

Madhya Pradesh has pioneered the reintroduction of cheetahs to India, a species declared extinct in 1952. The state has:​

Successfully relocated cheetahs from Namibia and South Africa to Kuno National Park​

Expanded cheetah habitat to Gandhi Sagar Wildlife Sanctuary​

Plans to introduce cheetahs to Nauradehi Wildlife Sanctuary​

Achieved successful breeding with 19 cubs adapting to Indian conditions​

This represents a historic conservation milestone, making India one of the few countries globally to successfully reintroduce locally extinct large carnivores.

Recent Wildlife Initiatives by CM Mohan Yadav

Chief Minister Dr. Mohan Yadav has prioritized wildlife conservation since assuming office:

Vision 2047 Blueprint: Integrating ecological conservation with economic development​

Species Introduction Programs: Plans to bring rhinos and Indian bison from Assam to Omkareshwar​

Infrastructure Investment: Helicopter tourism service connecting wildlife destinations​

Crocodile Conservation: Release of crocodiles into the Narmada River at Omkareshwar​

UPSC Relevance: Key Points for Exam Preparation

Static Portions (Prelims and Mains)

Geography and Environment:

Location specifics: Omkareshwar Sanctuary spans Khandwa and Dewas districts; Ralamandal in Indore district; Kheoni in Dewas district

Rivers: Narmada River flows through Omkareshwar; Chambal River bisects Gandhi Sagar Sanctuary

Biodiversity hotspots: Madhya Pradesh falls under the Central Indian Highlands, part of the Deccan Peninsula biogeographic zone

Polity and Governance:

Constitutional Provisions: Article 48A (State shall endeavor to protect environment, forests, and wildlife); Article 51A(g) (Fundamental duty to protect environment)

Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Framework for sanctuary notifications and tiger reserves

Environment Protection Act, 1986: Regulatory framework for conservation

Supreme Court-appointed empowered committees: Role in sanctuary approvals

Economic Development:

Wildlife tourism economics: Contribution to state GDP, employment generation, foreign exchange earnings

Compensatory afforestation: Economic valuation of ecosystem services

Current Affairs (Prelims and Mains)

Recent Developments:

Omkareshwar as 27th sanctuary of Madhya Pradesh (November 2025)

Madhav National Park declared as 9th tiger reserve (2024)

Ratapani Tiger Reserve notification (2024)

Cheetah reintroduction to Gandhi Sagar (April 2025)

Government Initiatives:

Project Cheetah: Reintroduction program under NTCA

Project Tiger: India's flagship conservation program

Vision 2047: Madhya Pradesh's comprehensive development roadmap

Essay and Ethics Relevance

Potential Essay Topics:

"Balancing development and conservation in India"

"Wildlife tourism as a tool for conservation and rural development"

"India's success in tiger conservation: Lessons learned"

"Community participation in wildlife conservation"

Ethics Case Studies:

Compensatory conservation after dam projects (delayed justice vs. environmental accountability)

Human-wildlife conflict resolution (rights of local communities vs. wildlife protection)

Tourism in protected areas (economic benefits vs. ecological disturbance)

Why This Matters for Your Exam Preparation

Prelims Significance

Questions from this topic can appear as:

Direct Factual Questions:

"Which state has the highest number of tigers in India?" (Answer: Madhya Pradesh - 785 tigers)

"Omkareshwar Wildlife Sanctuary is located in which districts?" (Answer: Khandwa and Dewas)

"Which river flows through Omkareshwar?" (Answer: Narmada)

Statement-Based Questions:

Statement I: Madhya Pradesh has 9 tiger reserves as of 2025.

Statement II: Omkareshwar is India's newest tiger reserve.

(Answer: Statement I is correct; Statement II may be incorrect as final tiger reserve status is pending)

Map-Based Questions:

Identifying sanctuary locations on Madhya Pradesh map

Wildlife corridor connections between reserves

Mains Significance

GS Paper 3 (Environment):

"Discuss the significance of creating wildlife corridors in addressing human-wildlife conflict. Illustrate with examples from Madhya Pradesh." (15 marks)

"Examine the role of compensatory afforestation in balancing development and conservation in India." (10 marks)

"Wildlife tourism can be both a conservation tool and a threat. Critically analyze with reference to tiger reserves in India." (15 marks)

GS Paper 2 (Governance):

"Analyze the effectiveness of Project Tiger in India. What lessons can be applied to conservation of other endangered species?" (15 marks)

GS Paper 1 (Geography):

"Account for the high concentration of tiger population in the Central Indian landscape. What geographical factors contribute to this distribution?" (10 marks)

Interview Relevance

Panel members might ask:

"What is your opinion on introducing exotic species like cheetahs to Indian habitats?"

"How can we balance tourism revenue with wildlife protection?"

"What are the ethical implications of displacing local communities for wildlife sanctuaries?"

"As a future administrator, how would you address human-wildlife conflict situations?"

Conclusion: A New Chapter in Conservation-Led Development

The announcement of Omkareshwar Wildlife Sanctuary and the proposal for Devi Ahilyabai Sanctuary represent more than just additions to Madhya Pradesh's protected area network. They signal a paradigm shift in how state governments can integrate conservation with tourism, rural development, and regional identity.

Indore's unique position as India's first city surrounded by four sanctuaries within 150 kilometers creates a replicable model for other urban centers. It demonstrates that rapid urbanization and ecological preservation need not be mutually exclusive—rather, they can be complementary forces driving sustainable development.

For UPSC aspirants, this topic offers rich material cutting across multiple papers and optional subjects. It connects geography with governance, environment with economics, and ethics with current affairs. Understanding this development comprehensively will not only help in answering direct questions but also in enriching your essay writing, answer presentation, and interview discussions with contemporary, relevant examples.

As Chief Minister Mohan Yadav stated during the announcement, "This is not just a sanctuary; it is the dawn of our 27th sanctuary in nurturing nature's bounty." This sentiment captures the essence of what conservation means for modern India—a commitment to preserving our natural heritage while building pathways for inclusive, sustainable growth.​

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