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Wetlands Conservation


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       Rohit Rattan*1, Bharti Sharma2, Rakesh Kumar3, Vijay Saigal4, and Sudeep Shukla5

       1 Western Himalayas Conservation Programme, World Wide Fund for Nature India, New Delhi, India

       2 School of Biosciences and Biotechnology, BGSB University, Rajouri, Jammu and Kashmir, India

       3 Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Jammu, Jammu, Jammu and Kashmir, India

       4 Department of Law, University of Jammu, Jammu, Jammu and Kashmir, India

       5 Environment Pollution Analysis Lab, Bhiwadi, Alwar, Rajasthan, India

       * Rohit Rattan, Email: [email protected]

      Though the wetland conversion and their corresponding decline have been going on for centuries, it was only in the early part of the twentieth century that their significance was realized and, consequently, deliberations toward their conservation began to gain strength. In North America, many researchers started raising their concerns on waterfowl decline as a result of wetland drainage since the 1920s (Schmidt 2006). In Europe, the conservationists had been projecting the issues of wetland degradation from the early 1960s (Hoffmann 1964; Swift 1964). This prompted the IUCN to launch the MAR Project (from “MARshes,” “MARécages,” and “MARismas”) for the conservation and management of wetlands in the early 1960s. The project MAR was conceived during the MAR conference held in French Camargue from 12 to 16 November 1962 (Hoffmann 1964; Ramsar Convention Secretariat 2011). The recommendations made during the MAR conference later paved the way for the establishment of an international convention on wetlands at the Ramsar Convention in 1971 (Matthews 1993; Ramsar Convention Secretariat 2011; Davidson 2014).

      After the MAR conference in 1962, a series of meetings were held in different parts of the world such as St. Andrews (1963), Noordwijk (1966), Morges (1967), Leningrad (1968), Vienna (1969), Moscow (1969), Espoo (1970), and Knokke (1970). During these eight years of deliberations, the official document for “Convention on Wetlands of International Importance” was finalized. The Convention was initially scheduled to be organized at the city of Babolsar in Iran, but the venue was later shifted to the resort town of Ramsar located on the shores of the Caspian Sea and having better connectivity and access to logistics (Carp 1972; Matthews 1993). The Ramsar Convention was organized on 2 February 1971 by the Game and Fish Department of Iran. The Ramsar Convention was officially named “The Convention on Wetlands of International Importance especially as Waterfowl Habitat.” The convention was attended by official delegates from 18 nations which included Germany, India, Iran, Ireland, Jordan, the Netherlands, Pakistan, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the USSR, and the United Kingdom. Observers from five other countries, namely Bulgaria, Greece, Hungary, Italy, and Romania, also attended the convention. In addition, delegates from various intergovernmental agencies (like FAO and UNESCO) and nongovernmental organizations (like CIC, IBP, ICBP, IUCN, IWRB, and WWF) were also among those who attended the convention (Matthews 1993; Ramsar Convention Secretariat 2011).

      The original official text of the Ramsar Convention, agreed upon and adopted by the contracting parties of the convention, was signed on 2 February 1971. Since its adoption, the convention has undergone modification on two occasions, first by the Paris Protocol and later by Regina Amendments. Paris protocol was adopted during an Extraordinary Conference of Parties (COP) held at UNESCO headquarters in Paris in December 1982 and came into force in 1986. The Paris Protocol is known for recognizing the need for and adopting a procedure for amending the convention. The protocol added Article 10bis which lays down the process to bring amendments to the convention. The Regina Amendments were a series of amendments to Articles 6 and 7 that were accepted at an Extraordinary Conference of the Contracting Parties held in Regina, Canada, on 28 May 1987 (Matthews 1993). These amendments did not alter the fundamental structure and guiding principles of the convention, rather these were related to the convention’s operation. They defined the powers of the Conference of the Parties, established an intersessional Standing Committee, established a permanent secretariat, and set up a budget for the Convention. Regina amendments came into force in May 1994. The treaty’s current text has been subdivided into 13 articles (i.e. articles 1–10, article 10bis, and articles 11 and 12).