https://indianmasterminds.com

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Conserving Wild Buffalo in Chhattisgarh

Indian Masterminds Stories

Global warming, climate change, deforestation and industrialisation have majorly impacted our eco-system and many species are now facing extinction. Various species like tigers, Asiatic elephant, snow leopard, panda and number of birds have been declared as endangered species. While conservation of some of these species including the big cats are given importance worldwide, some species like the wild buffalo have been sidelined. 

The population of wild buffalo (Bubalus Arnee) in India can be divided into two circuits, central India and Northeast. Although an estimated population of around 4000 exists in the northeast, an alarming decline has been witnessed in the central India circuit. Currently, not more than 50 buffaloes exist in the central Indian landscape, restricted to two pockets in Chhattisgarh and a small area in bordering Maharashtra. 

The recent drastic decline in the wild buffalo population in Chhattisgarh led the state government to declare it as ‘state animal’ and make all-out efforts to recover its dwindling population. A wild buffalo couple from the Northeast has been reintroduced in Chhattisgarh for conservation breeding as the state government attempts every possible measure to increase the number. 

Indian Masterminds talked to two wildlife conservationists to know more about the alarming dwindling numbers of wild buffalo and the reasons behind it. Senior IFS officer, Mr. Ramesh Pandey, and Dr. Samir Kumar Sinha from Wildlife Trust India cited the reasons behind the endangerment of wild buffalos and shared their views on how to go about conservation. 

REASONS BEHIND ENDANGERMENT 

The wild buffalo is the progenitor of domestic buffalo. The species is an endangered species as per IUCN Red List and a Schedule 1 species as per the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972.  These animals require large spaces with adequate food and water supply, but habitat fragmentation and degradation of forest and grasslands have resulted in population decline. The species witnessed a severe population decline at the turn of the 20th century, with many instances of local extermination from its historical range. 

Highlighting another reason, Mr. Samir Kumar Sinha said, “Hunting and retaliatory killing as an aftermath of crop depredation in fringe villages have also led to their population decline. Apart from decline in number, loss of genetic purity due to inbreeding with domestic buffalo in many areas and small isolated populations is another important concern.” 

Dr. Samir Kumar Sinha, Head of Conservation, Wildlife Trust of India

WHY BUFFALO CONSERVATION IS LESS TALKED ABOUT

Senior Indian Forest Services officer who is known for his works in wildlife protection, Mr. Ramesh Pandey said that although the wild buffalo has been depicted in historical texts, it is less focused on in terms of species-specific conservation efforts, unlike other species like tiger and elephant. “It is due to the fact that the species has never been projected as an exclusive species and the ecological role it plays in nature has not been given due recognition. They are prey species and have been domesticated also. So, their extinction issue is somewhere side lined.” 

Senior IFS officer Ramesh Pandey

Mr. Samir Kumar Sinha opined that the majority of the wild buffalo population is inside protected areas where more emphasis is on key predators and their prey species, which also helps the wild buffaloes in one way. However, “mitigation of species-specific threats takes a back seat, as has been in the case of wild buffalo,”, he added. 

IMPORTANCE IN ECO-SYSTEM 

Mega herbivores like wild buffalo are important for maintenance of grassland ecosystem and vegetation structure. They generally feed on tall and coarse grasses which facilitates fresh sprouting on which medium-sized herbivores (such as many deer species) depend. Thus, they play an important role of natural grass-cutter. This ecological function will be affected in the absence of the species, especially in areas where other mega-herbivores (such as gaur, rhino, elephant, etc.) are not present.

CONSERVATION EFFORTS 

Every species has its own role and importance, which should be considered while assigning conservation priority. Tiger is an umbrella species, hence becomes more significant in the landscapes it inhabits. While species like wild buffalo needs site-specific efforts to mitigate threats.

Mr. Sinha informed that in India, the major issue is in central India, where population has decimated over the last few decades and localized the wild buffalos in two small pockets. There their population is divided into two circuits. “The Udanti-Sitanadi population faces lack of females in the small population and the Indravati population is also small with around 50 wild buffalos. The only way out is to rewild the historical range with wild buffalo population and provide necessary protection and conservation inputs for the existing small populations.” 

He also mentioned that the Indravati area faces problem due to red-wing extremism for which strong political will and a sense of pride among people are necessary.

All in all, conservation breeding and reintroduction measures are the last resorts to revive the population at historical sites in the central Indian landscape, especially in Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha and Telangana. Chhattisgarh has taken initiative in this direction, which needs to be expedited if we really want to see the species flourishing in the region in the near future.


Indian Masterminds Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Related Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
NEWS
Major Swathi Shantha Kumar
Indian Army’s Major Swathi Shantha Kumar Wins UN Secretary-General’s Award 2025 for Gender-Inclusive Peacekeeping
navy
Indian Navy Signs Contract with Shoft Shipyard for 4 x 500T Self-Propelled Fuel Barges to Boost Make in India
UPSDM
Uttar Pradesh Skill Development Mission Allocates Sector-Wise Targets Under NSDC, Mandates 600-Hour Job-Oriented Training
Indian Overseas Bank (IOB)
Indian Overseas Bank Appoints Thomas Mathew as RBI Nominee Director, Replaces Sonali Sengupta from March 3, 2026
mou
MoD Signs ₹5,083 Crore Defence Deals for ALH Mk-III Helicopters and VL-Shtil Missiles to Boost Coast Guard and Navy
Delhi Police
Delhi Police Transfers 70 Officers in Major Reshuffle: 50 IPS, 20 DANIPS Moved; Dheeraj Kumar Named Joint CP (Crime)
IOB
IOB Becomes First Public Sector Bank in India to Align ERM Framework with ISO 31000:2018
thanjavur-covid-19
Bihar Govt Expands PMCH Patna Women’s Ward with 90 New Beds and Upcoming Air Ambulance Service
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Videos
17beno-zephine1-610x457
Beno Zephine: India’s First 100% Visually Challenged IFS Officer Who Rewrote the Rules of Diplomacy | EXCLUSIVE
Prajesh Kanta Jena
How IFS Prajesh Kanta Jena Empowered Women & Youth at Palamau Tiger Reserve
WhatsApp Image 2026-02-23 at 12.13
Exclusive | From Ridge to River: Prajesh Kanta Jena’s Community-Led Conservation Drive at Palamau
ADVERTISEMENT
UPSC Stories
Missed by One Mark, Became a Judge: How MP's Aryaman Cracked the CGPSC Civil Judge Exam in His First Attempt
Missed by One Mark, Became a Judge: How MP's Aryaman Cracked the CGPSC Civil Judge Exam in His First Attempt
Aryaman secured Rank 7 in the Chhattisgarh Civil Judge Exam 2024 in his first attempt, turning uncertainty,...
Sanjay Rao
Sanjay Rao Walked Out of ICU to Write His Exam — Now He’s an IRS Officer
From studying under a chimney lamp in a small village hut to serving as an IRS officer, Sanjay Rao’s...
Purvi Nanda IRS
She Was Told She Was ‘Ordinary’—Today She Serves the Nation as IRS Officer
Told she was “too ordinary” to crack UPSC, Purvi Nanda rose to become a 2021-batch IRS officer—proving...
Social Media
One-Horned Rhino Calf
Watch: First One-Horned Rhino Calf of 2026 Takes Birth at Jaldapara National Park, IFS Officer Shares Rare Footage
A newborn one-horned rhinoceros calf was spotted at Jaldapara National Park on January 1, 2026. IFS officer...
venomous banded krait
Rare Night Encounter: IFS Officer Spots Highly Venomous Banded Krait During Forest Patrol, Internet Amazed
An IFS officer’s night patrol video of a highly venomous banded krait has gone viral, highlighting India’s...
elephant rescue Karnataka
Heroic Karnataka Elephant Rescue: How a 28-Hour “Impossible Mission” Became a Triumph of Wildlife Care, IFS Parveen Kaswan Shares Video
A trapped elephant was rescued after 28 hours in Karnataka through a massive, expertly coordinated Forest...
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Latest
Narasimha N
When Heritage Spoke Louder Than DJs: How Vadodara Police Led a Silent Cultural Revolution
Col MV Shashidhar
“From Precision Decapitation to Cognitive Dominance: Lessons from the Middle East and the Changing Character of War”
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Videos
17beno-zephine1-610x457
Prajesh Kanta Jena
WhatsApp Image 2026-02-23 at 12.13
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT