Published on: August 5, 2025

CONSERVATION OF ASIAN GIANT TORTOISES IN NAGALAND

CONSERVATION OF ASIAN GIANT TORTOISES IN NAGALAND

NEWS – Naga Youths Lead the Revival of Endangered Asian Giant Tortoises in Nagaland

HIGHLIGHTS

Background & Threats

  • The Asian Giant Tortoise (Manouria emys), Asia’s largest tortoise, is critically endangered.
  • Major threats: Poaching for meat, habitat loss due to jhum cultivation, logging, forest fires, bamboo-cutting, and infrastructure development.
  • Only ~500 adult wild individuals estimated in the entire Northeast region.

Conservation Initiative

  • Nagaland Forest Dept & Turtle Survival Alliance India (TSA) launched a rewilding project in Peren district under the Indian Turtle Conservation Programme (ITCP).
  • 10 captive-bred tortoises released from Nagaland Zoological Park (NZP), which houses India’s largest captive population.
  • Soft release method used to help tortoises adapt to natural habitats gradually.

 Role of Local Youth

  • Naga youths, like Iteichube from the Zeliang tribe, trained as “Tortoise Guardians” and parabiologists.
  • Duties: Patrolling, tracking using VHF telemetry, data collection, and community engagement.
  • Aim: Community-led conservation and creating local stewardship.

Ecological Role

  • Tortoises are essential for seed dispersal, forest regeneration, and scavenging, earning them the title “small elephants of the forest.”

Conservation Status

  • IUCN Red List: Critically Endangered
  • CITES: Appendix II
  • Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972: Schedule IV

Habitat

  • Evergreen and bamboo forests in Bangladesh, India, Myanmar, Malaysia, etc.
  • Indian range includes Nengpui and Nongkhyllem Wildlife Sanctuaries.

Long-Term Goals

  • Restore wild populations through continued release.
  • Foster site fidelity and sustainable cohabitation between species and communities.