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Biodiversity Hotspots and Conservation: What the Exam Expects
April 15, 2026•7 min read
Biodiversity Hotspots: The Concept and the India-Specific Details
What Is a Hotspot? (The Concept Matters More Than the List)
Norman Myers coined the term in 1988. A biodiversity hotspot must satisfy two criteria:
- Contain at least 1,500 species of endemic vascular plants (found nowhere else on earth)
- Have lost at least 70% of its original habitat
The second criterion is critical and often ignored by aspirants. A hotspot is not just a rich area — it is a threatened rich area. This is why conservation prioritisation focuses on hotspots: high endemism + high threat = highest urgency.
There are 36 global biodiversity hotspots (as per Conservation International's latest count). India has four.
India's Four Biodiversity Hotspots
1. Western Ghats
- Stretches across Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Goa, Maharashtra
- Over 5,000 species of flowering plants, 139 mammal species, 508 bird species
- High endemism: Lion-tailed macaque, Nilgiri tahr, Malabar giant squirrel
- Overlaps with: Multiple Tiger Reserves, Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve (India's first)
2. Himalaya (includes Eastern Himalaya)
- Encompasses Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, northeastern states
- Includes the hotspot zone that extends into Bhutan, Nepal, Myanmar
- High altitude endemism: Snow leopard, Red panda, multiple rhododendron species
- Ganges-Brahmaputra river systems originate here — biodiversity tied to water security
**3. Indo-Burma (largely northeastern...
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