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The Convention on Wetlands of International Importance, more commonly known as the Ramsar Convention, is an international agreement promoting the conservation and wise use of wetlands. It is the only global treaty to focus on a single ecosystem. The treaty was negotiated through the 1960s by countries and non - governmental organisations concerned about the increasing loss and degradation of wetland habitat for migratory waterbirds. The Convention was adopted in the Iranian city of Ramsar in 1971 and came into force in 1975.
The Ramsar Convention has 171 Contracting Parties (member countries). Under the “three pillars” of the Convention, the Contracting Parties commit to:
There are nine criteria for identifying Wetlands of International Importance. These criteria are provided in the table below:
There are 2,416 Ramsar sites around the world with most sites being in the United Kingdom (175) and Mexico (142). The largest area under the Convention protection is in Bolivia with 148,000 square km area designated.
The world’s first site was the Cobourg Peninsula in Australia, designated in 1974. The largest sites are Rio Negro in Brazil (120,000 square kilometres), and Ngiri-Tumba-Maindombe in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The convention entered into force in India on February 1, 1982. Chilika Lake in Orissa and Keoladeo National Park in Rajasthan were the first two sites designated by the convention.
India currently has 42 sites designated as Wetlands of International Importance (Ramsar Sites), with a total surface area of 1,081,438 hectares. The names of these wetlands with the year of designation and the area they occupy in hectares are provided in the table below.
Sl. No. |
Name of Site |
State Location |
Date of Declaration |
Area |
1 |
Asan Conservation Reserve |
Uttarakhand |
21.7.2020 |
4.444 |
2 |
Asthamudi Wetland |
Kerala |
19.8.2002 |
614 |
3 |
Beas Conservation Reserve |
Punjab |
26.9.2019 |
64.289 |
4 |
Bhitarkanika Mangroves |
Orissa |
19.8.2002 |
650 |
5 |
Bhoj Wetlands |
Madhya Pradesh |
19.8.2002 |
32.01 |
6 |
Chandertal Wetland |
Himachal Pradesh |
8.11.2005 |
0.49 |
7 |
Chilka Lake |
Orissa |
1.10.1981 |
1165 |
8 |
Deepor Beel |
Assam |
19.8.2002 |
40 |
9 |
East Kolkata Wetlands |
West Bengal |
19.8.2002 |
125 |
10 |
Harike Lake |
Punjab |
23.3.1990 |
41 |
11 |
Hokera Wetland |
Jammu and Kashmir |
8.11.2005 |
13.75 |
12 |
Kabartal Wetland |
Bihar |
21.07.2020 |
26.20 |
13 |
Kanjli Lake |
Punjab |
22.1.2002 |
1.83 |
14 |
Keoladeo Ghana NP |
Rajasthan |
1.10.1981 |
28.73 |
15 |
Keshopur-Miani Community Reserve |
Punjab |
26.9.2019 |
3.439 |
16 |
Kolleru Lake |
Andhra Pradesh |
19.8.2002 |
901 |
17 |
Loktak Lake |
Manipur |
23.3.1990 |
266 |
18 |
Lonar Lake |
Maharashtra |
22.7.2020 |
4.27 |
19 |
Nalsarovar Bird Sanctuary |
Gujarat |
24.09.2012 |
120 |
20 |
Nandur Madhameshwar |
Maharashtra |
21.6.2019 |
14.37 |
21 |
Nangal Wildlife Sanctuary |
Punjab |
26.9.2019 |
1.16 |
22 |
Nawabganj Bird Sanctuary |
Uttar Pradesh |
19.9.2019 |
2.246 |
23 |
Parvati Agra Bird Sanctuary |
Uttar Pradesh |
2.12.2019 |
7.22 |
24 |
Point Calimere Wildlife and Bird Sanctuary |
Tamil Nadu |
19.8.2002 |
385 |
25 |
Pong Dam Lake |
Himachal Pradesh |
19.8.2002 |
156.62 |
26 |
Renuka Wetland |
Himachal Pradesh |
8.11.2005 |
0.2 |
27 |
Ropar Lake |
Punjab |
22.1.2002 |
13.65 |
28 |
Rudrasagar Lake |
Tripura |
8.11.2005 |
2.4 |
29 |
Saman Bird Sanctuary |
Uttar Pradesh |
2.12.2019 |
52.63 |
30 |
Samaspur Bird Sanctuary |
Uttar Pradesh |
3.10.2019 |
79.94 |
31 |
Sambhar Lake |
Rajasthan |
23.3.1990 |
240 |
32 |
Sandi Bird Sanctuary |
Uttar Pradesh |
26.9.2019 |
30.85 |
33 |
Sarsai Nawar Jheel |
Uttar Pradesh |
19.9.2019 |
16.13 |
34 |
Sasthamkotta Lake |
Kerala |
19.8.2002 |
3.73 |
35 |
Sunderbans Wetland |
West Bengal |
30.1.2019 |
4230 |
36 |
Surinsar-Mansar Lakes |
Jammu and Kashmir |
8.11.2005 |
3.5 |
37 |
Sur Sarovar |
Uttar Pradesh |
21.8.2020 |
4.31 |
38 |
Tso Kar Wetland Complex |
Ladakh |
17.11.2020 |
95.77 |
39 |
Tsomoriri Lake |
Jammu and Kashmir |
19.8.2002 |
120 |
40 |
Upper Ganga River |
Uttar Pradesh |
8.11.2005 |
265.9 |
41 |
Vembanad Kol Wetland |
Kerala |
19.8.2002 |
1512.5 |
42 |
Wular Lake |
Jammu & Kashmir |
23.3.1990 |
189 |
(Source: Ministry of Environment & Forests, Government of India)
With the designation of 13 sites, the maximum number of recognition of Ramsar sites occurred in the year 2002, followed by 2019, which observed the designation of 11 sites.
19 out of 28 states and union territories in India have the designated Ramsar sites.
By the number of sites, maximum of the Ramsar sites are in Uttar Pradesh , home to eight sites. By area, West Bengal (having 4,35,500 hectares of sites) has the maximum area of Ramsar sites, while Uttarakhand (having 444 hectares) has the least area occupied by the Ramsar sites.
Although Uttar Pradesh has the maximum number of sites, they occupy only 29,763 hectares of area in the state. On the other hand, only two sites-- Sunderban Wetlands and East Calcutta Wetlands-- occupy a huge area of in West Bengal.
The definition of wetlands included in the Convention is deliberately broad, encompassing "areas of marshes, fen, peatland or water, whether natural or artificial, permanent or temporary, with water that is flowing or static, fresh, brackish or salty, including areas of marine water the depth of which at low tide does not exceed six metres". It may also include riparian and coastal zones adjacent to the wetlands, and islands or bodies of marine water deeper than six meters at low tide lying within the wetlands. These characteristics form the basis for classifying different wetland types contained in the `Ramsar Classification of Wetland Type'.
The Ramsar Classification of Wetland Type currently in use, was adopted by the Conference of the Parties in 1990. It divides wetlands into three main categories, namely: marine and coastal wetlands, inland wetlands, and man-made wetlands. The categories have further subdivisions which gives a total of 40 wetland types.
Based on the wetland types, out of India’s 42 Ramsar sites, 33 are inland wetlands, while 20 are human-made and eight wetlands are marine or coastal wetlands. In many wetlands the type overlaps like Kolleru Lake in Andhra Pradesh is an inland, marine and a human-made wetland.
Wetlands provide a range of benefits and functions for people and the environment. The multifunctional nature of wetlands has been conceptualised in the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment’s ‘wetland ecosystem services’, which stresses how they contribute to human well-being and poverty alleviation.
These services are divided into four categories broadly—provisioning, regulating, cultural and spiritual.
The examples of these services are given in the table below.
Services |
Examples |
Provisioning |
Food, freshwater, fibre, fuel, medicinal, genetic |
Regulating |
Climate regulation, water regulation (hydrological flows), water purification and waste treatment, erosion control, natural hazard protection, pollination |
Cultural |
Spiritual and inspirational, Recreational, Aesthetic, Educational |
Supporting |
Soil formation, nutrient cycling |
Wetlands are among the most threatened ecosystems in the world. These ecosystems encounter both natural and human threats. The natural threats arise from inevitable naturally occurred processes that have the potential to damage wetlands like flooding, land subsidence, soil erosion, and drought.To expand their economic benefits, humans have extensively reclaimed natural wetlands, and thus pose a threat to the existence of wetlands. Land conversion, discharge of hazardous wastes, unsustainable ecotourism, the introduction of alien species are some of the human threats to wetlands.
Human settlements, agriculture and aquaculture, pollution and natural system modification mostly threaten the Ramsar sites in India. The other threats to these sites include invasive and other problematic species and genes; biological resource use; human intrusions and disturbance; transportation and service corridors; climate change and severe weather; energy production and mining; and geological events. |
It is in response to these threats to the ecological character of wetlands that the Ramsar Convention was formed. The Convention has laid guidance to Contracting Parties on the management of Ramsar Sites, in addition to its guidance on the wise use of all wetlands. The inclusion of a wetland in the List embodies the government’s commitment to take the steps necessary to ensure that its ecological character is maintained.
Yes. Keoladeo National Park and Loktak Lake are listed in Montreux record, which is a register of wetland sites on the List of Wetlands of International Importance where changes in ecological character have occurred, are occurring, or are likely to occur as a result of technological developments, pollution or other human interference. It is maintained as part of the Ramsar List.
In 1990, a technical assistance mechanism, the Ramsar Advisory Mission was adopted with an aim to provide assistance to developed and developing countries alike in solving the problems or threats that make inclusion in the Montreux Record necessary. But over the years the missions have tended to become more formal and frequently more detailed, involving multi-disciplinary teams, sometimes in collaboration with other bodies such as the World Heritage Convention, the World Conservation Union (IUCN), and the UNESCO Man and the Biosphere Programme. Keoladeo National Park and Chilka lake are the two Ramsar sites in India that are part of the Mission. The Keoladeo National Park along with Sunderban Wetland are also a World Heritage site, while the latter is a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve as well.
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