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Forwarded from UPSC Editorial analysis
🔆Overfishing: The Threat To Ocean Wealth, Livelihoods

India’s marine fisheries sector has reached its maximum potential yield, however it needs to take decisive steps to ensure sustainable fishing practices, balancing economic growth with marine conservation.

India’s Fisheries Sector
India is the second largest fish producing country with around 8% share in global fish production. 

📍Ecological Damage Through Bycatch and Trawling
🔰Trawling Bycatch Crisis: In trawling, for every 1 kg of shrimp, over 10 kg of bycatch is discarded.
🔰Biodiversity Loss: Bycatch includes juveniles and non-target species, often dead or dying.
🔰Habitat Destruction: Shrimp trawling damages marine biodiversity, reefs, and food webs.

Juvenile Fishing and Mesh Size Issues :Mesh sizes <25 mm allow sub-legal fish into nets, reducing spawning stock biomass.

New Zealand’s Quota Management System (QMS) uses science-based total allowable catches.

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🔆 Srikakulam, Andhra Pradesh – A Historical Gem

📍 🏛 Historical Significance
Historians are working to restore Srikakulam’s ancient prominence.
Formerly known as Chicacole during British colonial rule.
Part of the Kalinga Dynasty, later under the Gajapati Kingdom.
🔆One Nation, One Mission: End Plastic Pollution

The Union Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change today launched a nationwide mass mobilisation campaign ‘One Nation, One Mission: End Plastic Pollution’, in the run up to World Environment Day 2025.

This campaign highlights India’s unwavering commitment to environmental protection and sustainability, aligned with India’s flagship initiative—Mission LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment).

📍The Key thrust areas of the Campaign:
Awareness and Advocacy regarding Plastic pollution
Reduced Use and Generation of Plastic waste including Single Use Plastic
Manage Plastic Waste including Single Use Plastic through Segregation, Collection, Disposal and Recycling of Plastic waste.
Promoting development of sustainable alternatives to single use plastic.

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India’s lion population, exclusively concentrated in Gujarat, has risen by 32% between 2020 and 2025, with 891 lions reported, according to a report from the Gujarat Forest Department released

Though the maximum number of lions – 394 – have been observed in the Gir National Park and Paniya Wildlife Sanctuary, considered the ‘source’ population,

📍Challenges and concerns

While a growing lion population is generally positive for conservation, it also presents challenges, especially for areas with human populations.
Increased lion presence outside core areas leads to more human-wildlife conflict, potentially causing economic losses for local communities.
Furthermore, the growing population may strain limited resources and habitats, impacting the overall ecological balance.

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2025/07/03 11:42:45
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