Threats to Biodiversity โ HIPPO Framework
The five major threats to biodiversity, invasive species in India, the Sixth Mass Extinction, and climate change impacts for UPSC & PSC exams.
The HIPPO Framework
The HIPPO framework, popularised by E.O. Wilson, identifies the five primary drivers of biodiversity loss in order of their overall impact:
Habitat Loss & Degradation โ The #1 Threat
Destruction, fragmentation, or degradation of natural habitats. Caused by deforestation, agricultural expansion, urbanisation, mining, and infrastructure development. Affects more species than any other threat.
Invasive Species
Non-native species introduced (intentionally or accidentally) that outcompete, prey upon, or displace native species. Second most important cause of biodiversity loss globally.
Pollution
Chemical pollution (pesticides, heavy metals, industrial effluents), plastic pollution, noise pollution, and light pollution degrade habitats and directly harm organisms.
Population Growth (Human)
Growing human population increases demand for land, water, food, and energy โ driving overexploitation of natural resources and habitat conversion.
Overexploitation
Unsustainable harvesting of species through hunting, poaching, overfishing, and collection for trade. Directly reduces population sizes below viable levels.
Habitat Loss in Detail
- Deforestation: India loses significant forest cover annually to agriculture, logging, and development
- Habitat fragmentation: Large continuous habitats broken into smaller isolated patches โ reduces gene flow and increases extinction risk
- Edge effects: Fragmented patches have more “edge” relative to interior โ edge habitats are more disturbed and support fewer interior-specialist species
- Minimum Viable Population (MVP): The smallest population size that can persist in the wild without significant risk of extinction โ fragmentation pushes populations below MVP
- Wildlife corridors: Strips of habitat connecting fragmented patches โ critical for maintaining gene flow (e.g., Elephant corridors in India)
Invasive Species in India
Invasive alien species (IAS) are among the most serious threats to India’s biodiversity, particularly in protected areas:
| Invasive Species | Type | Impact in India | Affected Region |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lantana camara | Shrub (from Central America) | Invades forest understory; reduces native plant diversity; toxic to livestock | Across India’s forests, especially tiger reserves |
| Water Hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) | Aquatic plant (from South America) | Chokes water bodies; depletes oxygen; kills fish; blocks navigation | Kerala backwaters, Loktak Lake, Chilika Lake |
| Parthenium hysterophorus | Weed (from Mexico) | Allelopathic โ suppresses native plants; causes allergies in humans and animals | Roadsides, agricultural fields across India |
| Prosopis juliflora (Vilayati Babool) | Tree (from Americas) | Invades grasslands; reduces water table; displaces native vegetation | Rajasthan, Gujarat, Deccan grasslands |
| Mikania micrantha (Mile-a-minute) | Vine (from South America) | Smothers native vegetation; major threat in NE India and Western Ghats | NE India, Western Ghats |
The Sixth Mass Extinction
Earth has experienced five major mass extinctions in its history (the most recent being the K-Pg event 66 million years ago that wiped out non-avian dinosaurs). Scientists now warn we are in the midst of a Sixth Mass Extinction โ the Holocene Extinction โ driven entirely by human activities.
- Current extinction rate is estimated at 1,000 times the natural background rate
- Some estimates suggest up to 1 million species are currently threatened with extinction (IPBES 2019)
- Unlike previous mass extinctions, this one is driven by a single species โ Homo sapiens
- Vertebrate populations have declined by an average of 68% since 1970 (WWF Living Planet Report 2020)
- The term “biological annihilation” has been used by scientists to describe the scale of current losses
Climate Change as an Emerging Threat
Climate change is rapidly becoming one of the most significant drivers of biodiversity loss, interacting with and amplifying all other HIPPO threats:
- Coral bleaching: Rising sea temperatures cause corals to expel symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae), leading to bleaching and death. India’s Lakshadweep and Andaman reefs are severely affected
- Range shifts: Species moving poleward or to higher altitudes as temperatures rise โ some cannot move fast enough
- Phenological mismatch: Timing of biological events (flowering, migration, breeding) shifts out of sync with food availability or pollinator presence
- Sea level rise: Threatens coastal and island ecosystems โ mangroves, coral reefs, nesting beaches
- Glacial retreat: Threatens Himalayan biodiversity and downstream freshwater ecosystems
Revision Checklist
โ Habitat loss = #1 threat to biodiversity globally
โ Fragmentation โ edge effects โ reduced gene flow โ below MVP
โ Lantana camara: forest understory invader; toxic to livestock
โ Water hyacinth: Kerala backwaters, Loktak Lake; depletes oxygen
โ Parthenium: allelopathic weed; causes allergies
โ Sixth Mass Extinction = Holocene Extinction; driven by humans
โ Current extinction rate = 1,000ร background rate
โ ~1 million species threatened (IPBES 2019)
โ Climate change: coral bleaching, range shifts, phenological mismatch