What is in Great Nicobar, site of NITI Aayog’s mega project?
- June 25, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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What is in Great Nicobar, site of NITI Aayog’s mega project?
Sub: Polity
Sec: Species in news
Great Nicobar: Location and Environment
- Great Nicobar is the southernmost tip of India, part of the Andaman and Nicobar archipelago with over 600 islands.
- It is hilly, covered with lush rainforests, and receives about 3,500 mm of annual rainfall.
- The island hosts endangered and endemic species like the giant leatherback turtle, Nicobar megapode, Great Nicobar crake, Nicobar crab-eating macaque, and Nicobar tree shrew.
- It has an area of 910 sq km with mangroves and Pandan forests along its coast.
Giant leatherback turtle ![]() |
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Nicobar megapode ![]() |
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Great Nicobar crake ![]() |
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Nicobar crab-eating macaque ![]() |
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Nicobar tree shrew ![]()
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Communities on Great Nicobar:
- Shompen: Approximately 250 individuals, living mostly in interior forests, isolated, hunter-gatherers, classified as a Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group (PVTG).
- Nicobarese: Engage in farming and fishing, divided into Great Nicobarese (450 individuals, resettled in Campbell Bay post-2004 tsunami) and Little Nicobarese (850 individuals, living in Afra Bay, Pulomilo, and Little Nicobar).
Settler Population:
- The majority are settlers from mainland India, including retired military servicemen and their families settled between 1968 and 1975 from various states (Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu).
- Around 330 households settled in seven revenue villages on the east coast: Campbell Bay, Govindnagar, Jogindernagar, Vijaynagar, Laxminagar, Gandhinagar, and Shastrinagar.
- Campbell Bay is an administrative hub with local offices.
- There were additional migrations of fisherfolk, labourers, businesspersons, and administrative staff post-2004 tsunami.
- The total population of settlers is approximately 6,000.
Source: TH