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Nanda Devi National Park is one of the most spectacular wilderness areas
in the Himalayas. It is dominated by the 7,800m peak of Nanda
Devi, India’s second highest mountain which is approached
through the Rishi Ganga gorge, one of the deepest in the world.
No humans live in the Park which has remained more or less
intact because of its inaccessibility. It has a very diverse
flora and is the habitat of several endangered mammals, among
them the snow leopard, serow, Himalayan musk deer and bharal.
The Valley of Flowers is one of the two core zones, with
nearby Nanda Devi National Park, of the Nanda Devi Biosphere
Reserve. This remote park protects one of the most beautiful
mountain wildernesses of the western Himalayas, long celebrated
for its flowers. More than 600 Himalayan species grow there
in an area of less than 2,500 hectares. It is also the habitat
of the endangered snow leopard and rare Himalayan musk deer.
COUNTRY India – Uttaranchal State
NAME Nanda Devi & Valley Of Flowers
National Park
IUCN MANAGEMENT CATEGORY
Nanda Devi National Park: Ia (Strict Nature Reserve)
Valley Of Flowers National Park: II (National Park)
INTERNATIONAL DESIGNATIONS
2004: Both Parks designated as core zones of Nanda Devi Biosphere
Reserve under the UNESCO Man & Biosphere Programme (586,069ha).
NATURAL WORLD HERITAGE SERIAL SITE
1988: Nanda Devi National Park inscribed on the World Heritage
List under Natural Criteria iii and iv.
2005: Extended to include the Valley of Flowers National Park.
BIOGEOGRAPHICAL PROVINCE Himalayan Highlands (2.38.12)
GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION
Nanda Devi National Park lies in eastern Uttaranchal State,
near the Tibetan border in the Garhwal (western) Himalaya,
300 km northeast of Delhi. The main entrance to the Park is
via Lata and Tolma villages, some 25 km and 31 km respectively
east of Joshimath township. It leads through the almost inaccessible
gorge of Rishi Ganga to a basin surrounded by high mountain
ridges and peaks except to the west, lying between 30°16'
to 30° 32'N and 79° 44' to 80° 02'E. The Valley
of Flowers is in the Paspawati valley 23 km north-northwest
of Nanda Devi Park. It lies between 30° 41' to 30°
48'N and 79° 33' to 79° 46'E.
DATE AND HISTORY OF ESTABLISHMENT
1862: The Paspawati valley was discovered by Col. Edmund Smyth;
1931: The valley visited by the mountaineer F. Smythe who
wrote a book publicising the “Valley of Flowers”;
1936: The upper Nanda Devi basin was reached and described
by mountaineers E.Shipton & N.Odell who climbed Nanda
Devi;
1939: The basin was established as the Nanda Devi Game Sanctuary
by Government Order 1493/XIV- 28 of 7/01;
1962: Border disputes closed the area to traffic, altering
the local economy;
1974-82: The Sanctuary was opened to mountaineering but the
ensuing degradation led to its closure to all users;
1982: The Park was established as Sanjay Gandhi National Park
by Notification 3912/ XIV 3-35-80, but was later renamed Nanda
Devi National Park. Restrictions were imposed on the rights
of nearby villagers;
The Valley of Flowers was declared a National Park by Government
Order 4278/XIV-3-66-80 under the provisions of the Wildlife
Protection Act of 1972, for the conservation of its flora;
1986: The Nanda Devi National Biosphere Reserve was established
(223,674 ha) with a 514,857 ha buffer zone surrounding the
two Parks;
2000: The Biosphere Reserve extended by the government to
586,069 ha which included both National Park core zones (62,462
ha + 8,750 ha, totalling 71,212 ha); the Valley was declared
the second core zone of the expanded National Biosphere Reserve;
2004: The two core zones and buffer zone designated a UNESCO
Biosphere Reserve.
AREAS
Nanda Devi: 62,462 ha. Valley of Flowers: 8,750ha. The Parks
share a 514,857 ha buffer zone within the Biosphere Reserve
which is not within the World Heritage site.
LAND TENURE
Uttaranchal State in Chamoli District. Administered by the
Uttaranchal State Forestry Department of the national Ministry
of Environment and Forests.
ALTITUDE
Nanda Devi: 1,900m (lower Rishi Gorge), 2,100m (the basin)
to 7,817m (Nanda Devi West).
Valley of Flowers: 3,350m (valley floor) to 6,708m (Gauri
Parbat).
PHYSICAL FEATURES
Nanda Devi:
The Park is in the catchment basin of the Rishi Ganga, an
eastern tributary of the Dhauli Ganga which flows into a major
tributary of the Ganges, the Alaknanda River, at Joshimath.
The area is a vast glacial basin, divided by a series of parallel
north-south oriented ridges. These rise to the encircling
mountain rim formed by sixteen peaks above 6,000m. The best
known of these are Dunagiri (7,056m) and Kalanka (6,931m)
to the north, Nanda Devi East (7,434m) on the eastern rim,
Nanda Khat (6,811) in the southeast and Trisul (7,127m) in
the southwest. Nanda Devi West lies on a short ridge projecting
from Nanda Devi East into the basin. It is India's second
highest mountain. The upper Rishi Valley, known as the Inner
Sanctuary, is fed by the Changbang, North Rishi and North
Nanda Devi glaciers from the north and by the South Nanda
Devi and South Rishi glaciers from the south. An impressive
gorge cuts through the Devistan-Rishikot ridge below the confluence
of the North and South Rishi rivers. The Trisuli and Ramani
glaciers flow into the lower Rishi Valley or Outer Sanctuary,
below which the Rishi Ganga enters the narrow, deep, steep-sided
and virtually inaccessible lower gorge (Lavkumar, 1979).
The basin displays an array of periglacial and glacial forms
which cover a wide range of phases of growth. The combinations
of normal and perched glaciers on different rock types add
to the interest of the basin (T.Reed, pers.comm,1988). Most
of the Park falls within the central crystallines, a zone
of young granites and metamorphic rocks. Along the northern
edge the Tibetan-Tethys is exposed, consisting of sandstones,
micaceous quartzite, limestones and shales (Kumar & Sah,
1986). The Tethys sediments form Nanda Devi itself and with
many of the surrounding peaks, displays spectacular folding
and evidence of thrust movements, while other mountains like
Changbang are granite (M. Searle, pers. comm.,1988). The crystalline
rocks of the Vaikrita Group and lower part of the Tethys sediments
have been tentatively subdivided into four, the Lata, Ramani,
Kharapatal and Martoli formations (Maruo,1979). Further geological
details are given by Lamba (1987).
The Valley of Flowers:
The Valley is 20 km northwest of Nanda Devi National Park
across the wide valley of the Bhiundhar Ganga. It is one of
two hanging valleys lying at the head of the Bhiundhar valley,
the other being the shorter Hemkund valley which runs parallel
some 10 km south. It runs east-west approximately 15 km by
an average of 6 km wide, in the basin of the Paspawati river,
a small tributary flowing from the Tipra glacier which descends
from Gauri Parbat in the east. Its central valley, lying at
about 3,500m, is a gently inclined basin of some 1,000 hectares
of alpine meadows, the Kundalinisen plateau, the forested
slopes of which rise sharply through moraines to rocky ridges,
perpetually snow-covered peaks and glaciers which together
cover 73% of the valley. Alpine meadows cover 21% and forests
6% of the rest. The high surrounding mountains are not impassable
and open to the south at Ghangrea (3,072m), 7 km downstream.
There, the Paspawati meets the Lakshman Ganga, becoming the
Bhiundhar Ganga which flows 15 km to Govindghat at its confluence
with the Alaknanda, a tributary of the Ganges. The main surrounding
peaks are Nar Parbat (5,245m) to the northwest, Nilgiri Parbat
(6,479m) to the north, Rataban (6,126m) across the Bhuindhar
Pass, with Gauri Parbat (6,708m) to the east and Saptasring
(5,038) to the south. The Lakshman Ganga flows from Lokpal
lake (4,150m) in the Hemkund valley, a much visited place
of pilgrimage. The well exposed bedrock comprises crystallines
of the Vaikrita group with sedimentary, mica schist and shale
rocks. The soils are acidic and retain moisture well.
CLIMATE
Being an inner Himalayan valley, the Nanda Devi Basin has
a distinctive microclimate. Conditions are generally dry with
low annual precipitation, but there is heavy rainfall during
the monsoon from late June to early September. Prevailing
mist and low cloud during the monsoon keeps the soil moist,
hence the vegetation is lusher than is usual in the drier
inner Himalayan valleys. From mid April to June temperatures
are moderate to cool (19°C maximum). The Valley of Flowers
also has the microclimate of an enclosed inner Himalayan valley,
and is shielded from the full impact of the southwest summer
monsoon by the Greater Himalaya range to its south. There
is often dense fog and rain especially during the late summer
monsoon. Both Basin and Valley are usually snow-bound for
six to seven months between late October and late March, the
snow accumulating deeper and at lower altitudes on the shadowed
southern than on the northern side of the valleys (Lavkumar,
1979; Lamba, 1987).
VEGETATION
Nanda Devi:
Forests are restricted largely to the Rishi Gorge and are
dominated by West Himalayan fir Abies pindrow and
Rhododendron campanulatum with Himalayan birch Betula
utilis up to about 3,350m. Forming a broad belt between these
and the alpine meadows is birch forest, with an understorey
of rhododendron. Conditions are drier within the inner basin
becoming almost xeric up the main glaciers. Beyond Ramani,
the vegetation changes from forest to dry alpine communities,
with scrub juniper Juniperus pseudosabina becoming
the dominant cover. With altitude, junipers give way to grasses,
prone mosses and lichens, and on riverine soils to annual
herbs and dwarf willow Salix spp. Woody vegetation
extends along the sides of the main glaciers before changing
gradually to squat alpines and lichens (Lavkumar,1979; Hajra,1983a).
A floristic analysis of the area based on the 1993 Nanda
Devi Scientific and Ecological Expedition is given by Balodi
(1993). A total of 312 species, distributed over 199 genera
and 81 families, has been recorded and preserved in the herbarium
of the Northern Circle Botanical Survey of India. At least
17 of these are considered rare (Hajra,1983a). Not in this
list is Saussurea sudhanshui, newly described from
the area (Hajra,1983b). Within the larger area of the Biosphere
Reserve some 793 species from 400 genera and 120 families
were listed by the 1993 Nanda Devi Scientific and Ecological
Expedition (Hajra & Balodi, 1995). 8 nationally threatened
species recorded include Nardostachys grandiflora,
Picroehiza kurrooa (VU), Cypripedium elegans,
C. himalaicum, Dioscorea deltoidea (VU)
and Allium stracheyi (VU). Local people use a total
of 97 species, 17 for medicine, 55 as food plants, 15 as fodder,
16 for fuel, 5 for tools, 8 for house building, 2 as fibres,
6 for miscellaneous uses, and 11 for religious purposes.
The Valley of Flowers:
The valley has an unusually rich flora of over 600 species
with many rarities. It lies in a transitional area between
the Great Himalaya and Zanskar Mountains, and also between
the eastern and western Himalayan phytographic regions. The
valley has three main vegetation zones: sub-alpine between
3,200m and 3,500m which is the limit for trees, lower alpine
between 3,500m and 3,700m, and higher alpine above 3,700m.
The habitats include valley bottom, river bed, small forests,
meadows, eroded, scrubby and stable slopes, moraine, plateau,
bogs, stone desert and caves. The lower surrounding hills
in the buffer zone are thickly forested. The Forest Research
Institute in 1992 recorded 600 species of angiosperms and
30 pteridophytes in the valley and surroundings, discovering
58 new records for the valley of which 4 were new for Himalayan
Uttar Pradesh. Of these plants, 5 out of 6 species globally
threatened are not found in Nanda Devi National Park or elsewhere
in Uttaranchal: Aconitum falconeri, A. balfouri,
Himalayan maple Acer caesium, the blue Himalayan
poppy Mecanopsis aculeate and Saussurea atkinsoni
(Green & Peard, 2005). 31 species are classified as nationally
rare. The dominant family is the Asteraceae with 62 species.
45 medicinal plants are used by local villagers and several
species, such as Saussurea obvallata (brahmakamal)
are collected as religious offerings to Nanda Devi and other
deities. The site is designated a Centre of Plant Diversity
Characteristic of the sub-alpine zone are high altitude forests
which help to retain moisture and snow and support a large
number of floral and faunal communities. It is dominated by
the uncommon Himalayan maple Acer caesium (VU), west Himalayan
fir Abies pindrow, Himalayan white birch Betula
utilis, and Rhododendron campanulatum with Himalayan
yew Taxus wallichiana, Syringa emodi and
Sorbus lanata Some of the common herbs are Arisaema
jacquemontii, Boschniakia himalaica, Corydalis
cashmeriana, Polemonium caerulium, Polygonum
polystachyum (a rampant tall weed), Impatiens sulcata,
Geranium wallichianum, Helinia elliptica,
Galium aparine, Morina longifolia, Inula grandiflora,
Nomochoris oxypetala, Anemone rivularis, Pedicularis pectinata,
P. bicornuta, Primula denticulate and Trillidium
govanianum. In trampled areas where past livestock congregated,
Himalayan knotweed Polygonum polystachium is a rampant
weed.
The valley’s lower alpine zone has greater moisture
and deeper soil. A large number of herbaceous communities
grow in great profusion and it supports the greatest diversity
of alpine plants. Characteristic of the zone are dwarf shrubs,
cushion herbs, grasses and sedges. Common and singleseed junipers
Juniperus communis and J. squamata, Rhododendron
anthopogon, Salix spp., Lonicera myrtillus, Cotoneaster
microphyllus, and Rubus ellipticus are the major
shrub species in this zone. The herbaceous flora gives a spectacular
multicoloured array of flowers during the growing season.
Their growth cycle is very short, and they give way to other
communities later in the season. The dominant herbs of this
zone are Potentilla atrosanguinea, Geranium wallichianum,
Fritillaria roylei, Impatiens sulcata, Polygonum polystachyum,
Angelica archangelica, Selinum vaginatum. The common
grasses of the zone are Danthonia cachemyriana, Calamogrostis
emodensis, Agrostis pilosula and Trisetum spicatum;
the main sedge species are Kobresia roylei and Carex
nubigena.
The higher alpine zone is an area of pioneer species dispersed
among moraines, boulders, and rocky slopes, dominated by scattered
and stunted herbs with delicate flowers, mosses and lichens.
The stable slopes on southern aspects typically have meadows
of Kobresia sedge. On northern aspects and in sheltered
areas are extensive shrubby patches of Rhododendron lepidotum,
Cassiope fastigiata and Juniperus communis.
The zone’s dominant species are Kobresia royleana,
Trachydium roylei and Danthonia cachemyriana.
There are also several colourful herbs like Saussurea
simpsoniana, Potentilla argyrophylla, Geum elatum, Senecio
spp., Bistorta affinis, Bergenia stracheyi and the
blue Himalayan poppy.
FAUNA
Nanda Devi:
An account of the 14 known species of mammals is given by
Tak & Lamba (1985) and Lamba (1987), 6 being nationally
endangered. The basin is renowned for the abundance of its
ungulate populations, notably bharal or blue sheep Pseudois
nayaur, estimated to number 820 in 1977 (Lavkumar,1979),
440 in 1981-84 (Tak & Lamba,1985) but 990 were sighted
in 1993 (Shankaran). Preliminary surveys suggest that Himalayan
musk deer Moschus chrysogaster, mainland serow Capricornus
sumatrensis (VU) and Himalayan tahr Hemitragus jemlahicu
(VU) are also common (Lavkumar,1979; Tak & Lamba,1985;
Lamba,1987), but are probably not as plentiful as they used
to be due to hunting (Dang,1961). However, numbers appear
to have increased due to the closure of the Park to human
activities since 1983. The goral Nemorhaedus goral
does not seem to occur within the basin, although the species
does occur near the Park (Tak & Lamba, 1985; Lamba,1987).
Snow leopard Uncia uncia (EN) is reported to have
been "extraordinarily common" by Dang in 1961. This
may reflect the relative ease with which the species is observed
here and in the vicinity (Green, 1982) as it is very unlikely
that the Park now supports a large snow leopard population
because of its comparatively small size and the deep snow
in winter (Green, 1988). Other large carnivores are Himalayan
black bear Selenarctos thibetanus (VU) and brown
bear Ursus arctos, the existence of which has yet to be confirmed,
and common leopard P. pardus. The only primate present
is common langur Presbytis entellus (Tak & Lamba,
1985; Lamba, 1987) although rhesus macaque Macaca mullata
has been sighted outside the Park boundaries. Some 83 animal
species were reported from the area of the national Biosphere
Reserve by the Indian National MAB Committee.
Shankaran recorded a total of 114 species of birds in 30
families during the 1993 Nanda Devi Scientific and Ecological
Expedition. Some 67 of these species were not recorded during
earlier surveys. Abundant species recorded during May to June
include crested black tit Parus melanolophus, yellow-bellied
fantail flycatcher Rhipidura hypoxantha, orange-flanked
bush robin Erithacus cyanurus, bluefronted redstart
Phoenicurus frontalis, Indian tree pipit Anthus
hodgsoni, vinaceous breasted pipit A. roseatus,
common rosefinch Carpodacus erythrinus, and nutcracker
Nucifraga caryocatactes. Species richness was found
to be highest in the temperate forests, with a significant
decline in richness as elevation increased. Other expeditions
for which bird lists are available include Reed (1979) and
Tak & Kumar (1987). Lamba (1987) lists 80 species for
the area but the distribution of some of these is restricted
to lower altitudes in adjacent areas. Some 546 species are
reported from the Biosphere Reserve area by the Indian National
MAB Committee.
There is a lack of systematic surveys on invertebrate fauna.
Baindur recorded 28 species of butterfly from six families
during May-June 1993, including common yellow swallowtail
Papilo machaon, common blue apollo Parnassius
hardwickei, dark clouded yellow Colias electo,
Queen of Spain Issoria iathonia, and Indian tortoiseshell
Aglais cashmirensis.
The Valley of Flowers:
The density of wild animals in the Valley is not high but
all the animals found are nationally rare or endangered. 13
species of mammals are recorded for the Park and its vicinity
although only 9 species have been sighted directly: common
langur Presbytes entellus, flying squirrel Petaurista
petaurista, Himalayan black bear Selenarctos thibetanus
(VU), red fox Vulpes vulpes, Himalayan weasel Mustela
sibirica, and Himalayan yellow marten Martes flavigula,
goral Naemorhedus goral, Himalayan musk deer Moschus
chrysogaste, Indian mouse deer Moschiola meminna,
Himalayan thar Hemitragus jemlahicus (VU) and serow
Capricornis sumatrensis (VU). The tahr is common,
the serow, goral, musk deer and blue sheep are rare. The common
leopard Panthera pardus is reported from lower parts
of the valley closer to the villages. Local people have also
reported evidence of Himalayan brown bear Ursus arctos
and bharal or blue sheep Pseudois nayaur.
A recent faunal survey in October 2004 has established the
presence of snow leopard Uncia uncia (EN) in the
national park.
The area is within the West Himalayan Endemic Bird Area but
there have been no surveys specific to the Valley. 114 species
were seen in 1993 in Nanda Devi Park. Species frequently seen
in the valley include koklass pheasant Pucrasia macrolopha,
the nationally listed monal pheasant Lophophorus impejanus,
found in rhododendron thickets, scaly-bellied woodpecker Picus
squamatus, greater yellow naped woodpecker P. flavinucha,
great barbet Megalaima virens, blue throated barbet
M. asiatica, snow pigeon Columba leuconota,
spotted dove Streptopelia chinensis, lammergeier
Gypaetus barbatus, Himalayan griffon Gyps himalayensis,
yellow billed chough Pyrrhocorax graculus and red
billed chough P. pyrrhocorax. The area is relatively
poor in reptiles: most often seen are the high altitude lizard
Agama tuberculata, Himalayan ground skink Leiolopisma
himalayana and Himalayan pit viper Gloydius himalayanus.
Along with the flowers are wild bees and many species of butterfly
which need to be more researched. A few of the more evident
species are lime butterfly Papilio demoleus demoleus,
common yellow swallowtail Papilio machaon, common
mormon Papilio polytes romulus, spangle Papilio
protenor protenor and common blue apollo Parnassius
hardwickei.
CULTURAL HERITAGE
Nanda Devi:
Nanda Devi, named after Devi (‘goddess’), consort
of Shiva, is a manifestation of Parvati and has been revered
since ancient times (Reinhard,1987). Hindus have deified the
entire basin and every twelfth year devotees make the Nanda
Devi Raj Jat pilgrimage to the foot of Trisul to worship their
patroness the 'Bliss-giving Goddess' Nanda Devi (Kaur, 1982).
The local people are the Bhotiya, an ethnic Tibetan
group who lived by trading with Tibet via the Niti valley
until the 1962 war with China, by transhumant herding up and
down the valley, and on resources from the forests.
The Valley of Flowers:
Seven kilometres south of the Park entrance, at Ghangrea,
a track leads off to the Hemkund Sahib shrine sacred to Sikhs,
and the Hindu temple to Lakshman, brother of Ram, beside Lake
Lokpal. These have long been places of pilgrimage to both
Sikhs and Hindus, and 4-500,000 pilgrims visit them every
year. The valley itself was formerly used by migratory villagers
for grazing two to three herds of 700-1,000 sheep and goats
each and for 40-50 local cows and buffaloes. In 1862 the valley
was chanced on by Col. Edmund Smyth who praised the floral
beauty of the region in various periodicals. This attracted
Dr. T.G. Longstaff and A.L. Mumm to the Bhuyundar Valley in
1907. It was also found by the mountaineers F.Smythe and R.Holdsworth
in 1931 while coming down from an expedition to Mt. Kamet.
In 1937 Smythe revisited the valley and next year published
The Valley of Flowers, bringing it to world attention.
There is the tombstone of a botanist from Kew, Margrett Legge,
who died here in 1939.
LOCAL HUMAN POPULATION
Nanda Devi:
The Park is uninhabited but the buffer zone is home to 19
communities, five in permanent and 14 transhumant settlements.
The most prominent villages are Reni and Lata (114 families),
on the north-western side, and in the Niti valley there are
eight other villages, totalling 2,250 residents in 1997. 17
of these are inhabited by the Indo-Mongoloid Bhotiya
tribe who comprise marchhas (traders) and tolchhyas
(farmers) who practise rain-fed subsistence farming, make
products from wool, draw resources from the forest and, before
the area was closed off, grazed 4,000 goats and sheep in the
alpine pastures of Dharansi and Dibrugheta (Lavkumar,1979).
In1974 proposed Forestry Department clear-cutting of the local
trees in Reni prompted the famous Chipko (hug the
trees) movement among the villagers led by Gauri Devi, which
spread across the region, halting government efforts to harvest
the trees. The marchhas, no longer traders with Tibet,
turned to a living as porters and guides. When the National
Park was created in 1982 it was closed to all users, denying
the villagers this trade as well as use of their native resources,
which caused hardship and much resentment.
When the Biosphere Reserve was created in 1988, restrictions
were extended to the buffer zone without prior consultation
with the communities affected. Owing to their apprehensions
about the Reserve there was a concerted protest from ten villages
in the Niti valley in 1998 led by the villagers of Lata in
the Jhapto Cheeno (swoop and grab) movement, against
the Reserve management and the Forestry Department’s
restrictions on mountaineering and grazing. In 2001 the Lata
village council, set up the Nanda Devi Development Authority
to convince the government to reconsider the ban on mountaineering
so that the local community rather than outside interests
might once again benefit from ecotourism. A trail has been
created and the communities now receive a share in the fees
from visitors while they support fire prevention and anti
poaching activities, and provide guides and tourist accommodation.
They also offer home stays, which are becoming increasingly
popular amongst visitors.
The Valley of Flowers:
The valley itself is uninhabited. The local people are mostly
Bhotiya, non-tribal Rajput farmers and transhumant
herdsmen, who winter their flocks at the area’s main
permanent village of Pulna 12km south of the Park and 1,750m
lower in elevation. 5 km and 9 km south of the Park entrance
are the seasonal villages of Ghangrea (at 3,060m) and Bhiundhar
(at 2,240m), occupied in summer to serve the pilgrims and
tourists (when some 400 stalls line the pilgrim trail). The
people of Bhiundhar who numbered about 330 in 1999, may no
longer graze the valley and some families are still poor but
others earn well from tourism and the pilgrimage and are very
supportive of the Park (Srivastava, 1999). With support from
the Forest Department, the local communities have formed Eco-Development
Committees (EDCs). The EDCs at Bhyundhar and Govindghat provide
support to the Park management and look after the waste disposal
and management of visitor facilities along the trail outside
the National Park. Over 70 tonnes of garbage was removed by
these EDCs in the last two years alone.
VISITORS AND VISITOR FACILITIES
Nanda Devi:
The trek to Nanda Devi base camp is considered to
be one of the toughest in the world. When the Park was open
between 1974 and 1983 it became the second most popular Himalayan
destination after Everest, attracting large numbers of mountaineers
and trekkers from all over the world (Lamba, 1987): in 1982
there were some 4,000 visitors, mostly expedition members
and porters (Aitken,1981 & 1982). The Park was then closed
to both tourists and villagers because of the disturbance
caused: 1,000 kilograms of tourist litter were later removed
by the Indian team who made the 13th ascent of the mountain
in 1993. The Park was only reopened in 2003 for regulated
tourism following the new ecotourism policy of the state of
Uttaranchal. The trail up to Dibrugheta in the National Park
was opened to a maximum of 500 tourists per year in a program
for ecotourism regulated by the Forest Department with active
support from local communities. In the year 2003 over 2,200
tourists visited the Park and nearby eco-zone. In 2004 (to
the end of November), 184 tourists visited the Park and 1,638
tourists visited the eco-zone. Camping sites have been developed
in several places and the villagers offer home stays, which
are becoming increasingly popular amongst visitors. Further
facilities for pilgrimage, cycling, camping, mountaineering
courses and cultural tourism are planned. Joshimath, where
there are hotels, is about 170 km north of the railhead at
Rishikesh, and 220 km from Jolly Grant airport at Dehra Dun.
The Valley of Flowers:
The valley is very accessible and some of the many pilgrims
to the nearby shrines travel on to see it. In 1999, between
30 and 50 people visited the Park daily. In 2003-4, nearly
4,000 were recorded, 3,600 from India and 300 from abroad.
Visits occur between May and early October, on foot once within
the Park and guided by youths from the village to see that
the flowers are not trampled. There is a Forest Department
post and interpretation centre at Ghangrea near the entrance
with brochures, books and posters and where entry fees are
charged. For the last two years this has been managed by members
of the EDC who present slide and film shows for visitors.
There are sign boards in the park and guided nature trails
including a 19-kilometer trek. Regulations for trekking are
being prepared. No camping is allowed in the valley. But mountaineering
is allowed subject to permit and regulation, on two peaks,
Rataban and Ghauri Parbat. There are also trails out of the
park to the southwest and through bear-infested forest and
over glacial ice to the northeast. There are some 25 visitor
resthouses, lodges and hotels at Ghangrea near the Park entrance
and down the Bhiundhar at Govindghat on the Alaknanda, including
a very large Sikh gurudwara. There are Forest Department guesthouses
at both Ghangrea and Govindghat, and camping near Bhiundhar
village. The site is about 200 km north of the railhead at
Rishikesh, and 250 km from Dehra Dun airport.
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND FACILITIES
Nanda Devi:
The first recorded attempt to enter the sacred basin
was by W.Graham in 1883, but he was unable to get beyond the
gorge of the lower Rishi Ganga. Subsequent attempts by Dr
T. Longstaff in 1907 and H. Ruttledge in 1926, 1927 and 1932
also failed. Finally, in 1934, Eric Shipton and H. W. Tilman
pioneered a route to the ‘Inner Sanctuary’ by
forcing a passage up the upper gorge of the Rishi Ganga. Later,
in 1936, H. Tilman and N. Odell made the first ascent of Nanda
Devi, reputed the outstanding climb of the pre-War era. Their
accounts of this natural sanctuary first drew attention to
this spectacular mountain wilderness (Tilman,1935; Shipton,1936)
and led to its protection. A geological survey was conducted
by Maruo in 1979. Among the first published observations on
the wildlife of Nanda Devi are those of Dang (1961), Lavkumar
(1977,1979) and for birds, Reed (1979). Surveys of the flora
and mammalian fauna were carried out by the Botanical Survey
of India (Hajra, 1983a) and Zoological Survey of India (Tak
& Lamba, 1984, 1985; Lamba, 1987), respectively. The Nanda
Devi Scientific and Ecological Expedition conducted floral
and faunal surveys and habitat assessments in 1993. Following
the programme of decadal monitoring of the region, a combined
team of the Forest Department, Wildlife Institute of India,
G.B. Pant Institute of Himalayan Ecology & Development
and Garhwal University conducted surveys in the region again
in 2003. This research will contribute to the management of
the Park.
The Valley of Flowers:
The flora was surveyed and inventoried in 1987 by the Botanical
Survey of India, in 1992 by the Forest Research Institute
and in 1997 by the Wildlife Institute of India which found
five species new to science. A research nursery and seed/rhizome/tuber
bank for propagating rare plants and valuable medicinal herbs
has been created at Musadhar near the entrance of the site.
Rare and valuable medicinal plants are the subject of special
programs. These include Aconitum heterophyllum, A. falconeri,
Arnebia benthamii, Dactylorhiza hatagirea, Gymnadenia orchides,
Megacarpaea polyandra, Picrorhiza kurrooa, Podophyllum haxandrum
and Taxus wallichiana. Research plots have been set
up to determine the best way to control the spread of the
tall smothering Himalayan knotweed Polygonum polystachium
without damaging other plants or the surface of the soil.
A first annual survey was conducted in 2004 and will be repeated
annually.
CONSERVATION VALUE
Nanda Devi:
The area is one of the most spectacular wildernesses in the
Himalayas. The basin is dominated by the pyramidal peak of
Nanda Devi, India's second highest mountain, and drained by
the Rishi Ganga which has cut one of the finest gorges in
the world (Shipton, 1936; Kaur, 1982). It supports a diverse
flora, largely because of the wide altitudinal range, and
a number of rare or threatened animals. Unlike many other
Himalayan valleys, it is free from human settlement and owing
to its inaccessibility has remained largely unspoilt, particularly
the forests of the lower Rishi Valley. The Chipko
campaign made the site a symbol of participatory conservation
and ecotourism in India.
The Valley of Flowers:
The Valley is one of the two core zones of the Nanda Devi
Biosphere Reserve which protects one of the most spectacular
mountain wildernesses of the western Himalayas, among which
the Paspawati valley is celebrated for its flowers. More than
500 species grow there in an area of less than 2,500 hectares.
It is also the habitat of the endangered snow leopard, the
serow and rare Himalayan musk deer.
CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT
Nanda Devi:
The upper Rishi Ganga valleys (the Outer and Inner
Sanctuaries) were long preserved by the difficulty of penetrating
the lower Rishi gorge which remained unexplored until 1934.
Hunting, the collection of medicinal plants and other forms
of exploitation followed until the 1962 war with China closed
the border. From 1945 to 1974 the region remained closed to
foreign visitors. Traditionally, the alpine pastures around
Dharansi and Dibrugheta were grazed by livestock from Lata,
Tolma and Peng villages, and latterly from villages as far
up the Niti valley as Malari. A spate of mountaineering and
trekking followed the re-opening of the Reserve in 1974 but
caused such disturbance to the environment, that, on scientific
advice, trekking, expeditions and grazing were banned by authority
of the Chief Secretary of Uttar Pradesh (Aitken,1981 &
1983). The 1983 ban covered grazing, hunting, harvesting herbs,
wood-collection, mountaineering and trekking anywhere in the
core area of the then projected Biosphere Reserve, including
the whole National Park, Thus communities traditionally dependent
on sheep rearing and local resources had to seek alternate
pastures, change their vocations or emigrate. Over 25% left
the valley (Silori, 2001).
A preliminary management plan was prepared (Semwal &
Asthana, 1986) but by 1988 this had not been sanctioned by
the Chief Wildlife Warden. Included in the plan were recommendations
concerning the ban on tourism and ways in which to provide
employment for local people. Nandi Devi was earmarked as one
of several protected areas for future inclusion under the
Government of India's Project Snow Leopard (Ministry of Environment
& Forests,1987). The Pindari and Sundadhunga valleys at
the southern edge of the Nanda Devi massif were recommended
for designation as a sanctuary to protect their reportedly
large and viable ungulate and pheasant populations (Rodgers
& Panwar, 1988). In 1988, without local consultation,
a long-projected national Biosphere Reserve was created to
protect the region’s biodiversity, with Nanda Devi National
Park as the core area. Following the provisions of the Wildlife
(Protection) Act 1972, restrictions were imposed on grazing
and other human activities throughout the Biosphere Reserve
with adjacent buffer areas remaining open for legitimate community
needs. The condition of the flora and fauna greatly improved
but the villagers’ crops and cattle began to suffer
increased losses to wild animals for which compensation was
hard to obtain. As a result more than 75% of the residents
developed a very negative attitude towards the Reserve management
(Silori, 2001).
The 1998 Jhapto Cheeno protest against the restrictions
on grazing and mountaineering and against official indifference
enlisted world-wide interest. Faced with state support for
potential development of the basin by national and multinational
interests, the villagers created the Nanda Devi Development
Authority in 2001. Following this initiative, the Protected
Area management began to promote local enterpreneurship and
actively involve local communities which had previously been
ignored, in conservation activities. These now receive a share
in the trail management fees and help to prevent fires and
poaching. By 1993 the Nanda Devi Scientific and Ecological
Expedition concluded that wildlife numbers were increasing
and the ecosystem of the Park showed signs of recovery since
its closure. This recovery and continued improvement in the
biodiversity of the Park was re-confirmed in the decadal monitoring
of the Park in 2003 carried out by the scientists of the Wildlife
Institute of India, the Pant Institute of Himalayan Ecology
& Development and Garhwal University. The demand to lift
the restrictions on mountaineering is still raised occasionally,
both by mountaineers for whom this region remains the final
frontier and by villagers who see a potential for well paid
employment as porters and guides.
With support from the MAB programme initiatives of the Indian
government and the latest ecotourism policy of the newly created
state of Uttaranchal, regulated tourism has been allowed.
Community-based tourism plans for the villages around the
Park (Lata, Tolma, Peng and Reni) have been prepared. Under
these plans, capacity-building, the training and registration
of local youths as guides, the creation of home stays for
visitors, the establishment of local tour operator groups
for eco- and cultural tours, the development of handicrafts
and medical plant cultivation and the direct involvement of
Women's Welfare Groups have all been introduced. As a result
of these initiatives, over 2,200 tourists visited the Park
and nearby eco-zone in 2003. Eco-Development Committees have
been established in all the villages and PRA- (Participatory
Rule Appraisal) based micro-plans have been prepared by them,
supported with funds from various sources. This success was
recognised in 2004 by an Ecotourism award, and by the presence
of two local women at the Global Women’s Conference
on Environment at Nairobi.
The Valley of Flowers:
The Park is a natural laboratory for the conservation and
study of the western Himalayan flora. When it became a National
Park in 1982 livestock grazing ceased and restrictions were
imposed on nearby villagers. However, the Park’s staff
have begun to train them by building up their capacity as
wardens and plantsmen, trekking and mountaineering guides.
As wardens they are trained in implementing regulations and
handling offenders, in the use of instruments and fire arms,
in high altitude survival strategies and resolving conflicts
with wild animals and intruding hunters; as plantsmen they
are trained in plant identification, field biodiversity monitoring,
identifying and restoring rare plants and rehabilitating their
habitats. All are provided with better facilities and equipment.
The nursery at the entrance of the site is researching ways
to mitigate the pressure on rare and valuable plants and in
cooperation with the Eco-Development Committee of Bhiundhar
villagers have been encouraged to grow them on. The EDCs also
clear the waste and manage visitor facilities along the trail
outside the National Park. In 2002-3 in cooperation with the
villagers’ Eco-Development Committee and Forest Committee
of Bhiundhar the Forestry Department oversaw the clearing
of 50 tons of litter and removed 120 temporary stalls from
the pilgrim trail from Govindhar to Hekmund. The Committee
is also spreading awareness of the need to suppress the rampant
Himalayan knotweed.
Management is done within the 2003-2013 plan for Nanda Devi
Biosphere Reserve which is implemented annually in consultation
with local, district and state bodies but does not manage
the Parks directly. A new ten-year management plan for the
Valley of Flowers Park is due for completion in 2005 based
on the following objectives:
- The protection, in-situ and ex-situ conservation and monitoring
of the flora and fauna;
- Restoration of and research into the flora and fauna;
- Management of the habitats of the park for endangered
flora and fauna
- Development, upkeep and litter-clearing of trek routes
and basic facilities for park visitors with active support
and participation of the local communities.
- Education of local people about the biodiversity and
protection of the park;
- Generating opportunities in the local community for sustainable
livelihoods and building their capacity for responsible
ecotourism.
Key indicators for monitoring the state of conservation in
the park are:
- The status of rare and endangered flora such as the populations
of Saussurea obvallata, Meconopsis aculeata, Cypripedium
cordigerum, Dactlyorhiza hatagirea, Aconitum spp. in
permanent plots;
- The assessment of cover at past camps and trails by invaders
like Himalayan knotweed Polygonum polystachyum, Rumex
nepalensis, Impatiens sulcata and Osmunda claytoniana;
- Signs of threats to the wild flora and fauna from illegal
herb collection and poaching;
- Regeneration of birch and fir in landslide areas below
3300m.
MANAGEMENT CONSTRAINTS
Nanda Devi:
Hundreds of tons of litter, felling of trees and even cultural
vandalism created by expeditions, along with the introduction
of sheep and goats to the inner basin, reached serious proportions
before the closure of the Park (Clarke,1979; Aitken, 1981
& 1983). However, by 1993, after ten years of closure,
the wildlife had recovered and increased in numbers. Regular
patrolling inside the Park during winters is very challenging.
The two access routes into the inner basin are difficult to
maintain because of the terrain and heavy snow fall, and manning
the newly created checkpost at Lata Kharak throughout the
year is also a challenge. Although their participation in
ecotourism has been secured, their training for the work needs
continued development. The number of staff has gone up but
is still inadequate. A few of the wildlife staff have been
trained at the Nehru Institute of Mountaineering, Uttarkashi,
but they lack the necessary support for mountaineering equipment
to patrol the higher reaches of the Park year-round.
The Valley of Flowers:
The main management issues are, within the Valley, control
of invasive knotweed and, on the way to the Park, tourist
and pilgrim litter. This piles up by the tonne from the thousands
of tourists that visit the shrines: 300,000 plastic bottles
a year and 5-600 kg of human and mule dung per day. The local
people have now combined to clear this. A past threat to the
forests surrounding the pilgrim route was the destruction
of trees for firewood but this is now forbidden. Within the
Park some 1,000 ha of meadow are infested with the tall fast
growing Himalayan knotweed which controls erosion but crowds
out the subalpine flora. Its increase where livestock used
to congregate is related to the prohibition of grazing. While
livestock overgraze and over-enrich the soil, they may enhance
floral diversity by limiting the growth of taller more vigorous
plants. Its eradication and regular monitoring is expected
to be a major expense (Srivastava,1999). There is no pollution
and little danger from avalanches except on the approach road
from Govindghat. There is, nevertheless, a constant threat
from local poachers, especially to the snow leopard, and to
ungulates when they come down to the valleys in winter; also
from local indifference to wildlife conservation. This is
aggravated by lack of adequate funding for the training needed
for high altitude monitoring.
COMPARISON WITH SIMILAR SITES
The Valley is similar to Nanda Devi National Park, but has
many more and more northerly plant species and is much more
accessible. Entering the other Park requires time and mountaineering
skills; it remains a wilderness rightly protected as a Strict
Nature Reserve. At present there is only one World Heritage
site in the mountains between Assam and northern Pakistan
- the far larger mountainous Sagarmatha National Park in Nepal,
but there are such large differences in scale and terrain
as to make close comparison unrealistic. There may be comparable
valley sites in the nearer Himalayas which remain largely
unknown due to the difficulty of access and the strategic
sensitivity of the region. There are 17 protected areas in
the west Himalaya, covering 11.6% of the biotic province.
There are certainly some alpine valleys such as Ralam, Pindari,
Sunderdhunga, Khatling and Harkidoon, which may originally
have been comparable in number of plant species but all have
been degraded by overgrazing and medicinal plant collection.
Three adjacent valleys of Khiron, Khakbusandi and Bedini-Ali
have much less diversity. Nearby protected areas in Uttaranchal
which include valleys are Gangotri and Govind National Parks,
Kendarnath, Ascot and Govind Pashu Vihar Wildlife Sanctuaries
and, in Himachal Pradesh, Sangla Wildlife Sanctuary. But none
has a comparable floristic richness, and in so compact an
area. The valley’s 600 species of plants comprise 25%
of the vascular plants found in the Chamoli district though
it is only 1.3% of its area. The valley is also celebrated
in literature, both Indian and English, for its beauty, its
flowers and the associated religious sites.
STAFF
Nanda Devi:
In 2004 a staff of 89 was deployed: one Director/Conservator
of Forests, one Deputy Conservator of Forests, one Sub divisional
Forest Officer, two Range Officers, two Deputy Range Officers,
five Asst. Wildlife Wardens, six foresters, 22 Wildlife Guards,
17 Forest Guards and 21 part-time watchers. Out of these,
22 field staff have been deployed at the Park from the Biosphere
Reserve establishment.
The Valley of Flowers:
One Divisional Forest Officer, one Range Officer, 2 Foresters,
4 wildlife guards, 2 buffer forest guards.
BUDGET
Nanda Devi:
Approximately Rs20 lakhs (Rs20,000,000/US$44,500)
in 2003-4. US$75,000 from the budget for Nanda Devi Biosphere
Reserve is given to the Park.
The Valley of Flowers:
This comes from the national Ministry of Environment
and Forests. An annual average expenditure of Rs17.5 lakhs
(Rs1,750,000 / US$39,000) was recommended over a ten year
period from 2000-2009 (Srivastava, 1999). US$45,000 from the
budget for Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve is allocated to the
Park.
LOCAL ADDRESSES
Chief Wildlife Warden, 87 Rajpur Road, Dehradun, PIN-248001,
Uttaranchal, India.
Director, Nanda Devi Biosphere Reserve, Gopeshwar, PIN-246401,
Chamoli District, Uttaranchal.
Divisional Forest Officer, Nanda Devi National Park, Joshimath,
Chamoli District, Uttaranchal.
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DATE
Nanda Devi: December 1987. Updated 7-1991,
5-1997, July 2005.
Valley of Flowers: July, 2005.
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