The Bold Voice of J&K

Dachigam National Park-Kashmir’s living wilderness in a changing world

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Mohammad Hanief

Just 22 kilometers from the heart of Srinagar lies one of India’s most remarkable natural sanctuaries – Dachigam National Park, a 141-square-kilometer expanse of forested slopes, alpine meadows, and clear mountain streams nestled in the Zabarwan Range. This park, whose name means “ten villages” in Kashmiri, was established over a century ago to protect the water catchment of the Dal Lake. Today, it stands as the last refuge of the critically endangered Kashmir stag, or Hangul, and as a living symbol of the fragile harmony between people and nature in the valley.
Dachigam is not just a wildlife reserve; it is an ecological lifeline. Stretching from an altitude of around 1,700 meters to over 4,200 meters above sea level, the park’s landscape transforms dramatically from lower temperate forests of oak, walnut, and birch to high-altitude coniferous woods and alpine grasslands. Its rich diversity of habitats supports a wide array of species that have adapted to these steep altitudinal gradients and varying climates. Every turn of its narrow trails reveals a different ecosystem – cascading streams, dense canopies, snow-fed cliffs, and serene meadows alive with birdsong.
The Hangul, with its elegant antlers and reddish-brown coat, is the crown jewel of Dachigam’s biodiversity. Once found across the entire Kashmir Valley, its population declined drastically due to habitat loss, poaching, and human encroachment. By the late 20th century, the Hangul had vanished from almost all its historical ranges, surviving only within Dachigam. Recent census reports conducted by the Jammu and Kashmir Wildlife Protection Department indicate that the Hangul population now stands at around 260 individuals. While this number marks a slight increase from earlier years, it remains alarmingly low for a species once regarded as the pride of Kashmir’s forests. Conservationists now regard Dachigam as the last stronghold of the Hangul, a species teetering on the edge of extinction.
The park’s importance extends far beyond this single species. Dachigam’s forests are home to the Himalayan black bear, leopard, serow, musk deer, and the elusive snow leopard, which occasionally roams its higher ridges during harsh winters. Over 150 species of birds have been recorded here, including the Himalayan monal, koklass pheasant, blue magpie, and crimson tragopan. Streams running through the park harbor brown trout and other aquatic life, sustaining an intricate food web that keeps the ecosystem in balance. During spring and summer, Dachigam bursts into colour with wildflowers carpeting its meadows and slopes, attracting pollinators and adding to its scenic charm.
Despite its protected status, Dachigam faces mounting ecological pressures. Urban expansion from Srinagar’s outskirts has encroached dangerously close to its boundaries, bringing with it pollution, noise, and waste. Studies conducted in 2023 revealed a troubling 7 percent reduction in forest cover within the park since the 1960s, alongside a threefold increase in built-up areas around its periphery. Grazing by livestock in the buffer zones, unregulated tourism, and the spread of invasive plant species have further strained its fragile ecosystems. What was once an isolated wilderness now stands as an island of green amidst growing human activity.
These environmental stresses also threaten the water systems that Dachigam was originally established to protect. The park’s upper streams feed into the Dagwan and Marsar rivers, which flow down to sustain the Dal Lake – the heart of Srinagar’s ecology and tourism. Any degradation within Dachigam directly impacts the quality and quantity of water that nourishes the city and its people. In that sense, the park’s conservation is not only a matter of wildlife protection but of human well-being and urban sustainability.
Efforts to safeguard Dachigam and its inhabitants have intensified in recent years. The Hangul Conservation Project, led by the Department of Wildlife Protection in collaboration with the Wildlife Institute of India, focuses on habitat management, anti-poaching surveillance, and population monitoring. During sensitive breeding and rutting seasons, entry into the park is temporarily suspended to minimize disturbance to wildlife. The most recent closure took place in September 2023, ensuring that the Hangul’s breeding period proceeded without human interference. Such measures highlight the delicate balance between conservation and public access.
The government has also reintroduced controlled visitor permits through an online booking system. Visitors can now access designated trails and educational facilities under strict supervision. This approach seeks to promote eco-tourism – tourism that educates and inspires without harming the environment. For researchers, students, and nature enthusiasts, Dachigam offers a living classroom to observe the intricate relationships between species, habitats, and human actions. However, officials emphasize that the park cannot accommodate mass tourism; its preservation depends on restraint and respect.
One of the major conservation strategies now under consideration is the creation of the Greater Dachigam Landscape, a connected ecological corridor linking the park to neighboring forest divisions such as Overa-Aru, Wangat, and Sindh Valley. These areas once formed the Hangul’s migratory routes before fragmentation confined the species to Dachigam. By restoring connectivity, conservationists hope to allow gene flow between isolated populations and reduce the risks of inbreeding and disease. Such landscape-level planning represents a modern approach to wildlife management that looks beyond the boundaries of a single protected area.
Dachigam also holds deep cultural and emotional significance for the people of Kashmir. For generations, its slopes have been a source of pride, its forests a symbol of natural abundance. Yet this pride must now translate into collective responsibility. The health of the park reflects the health of the region itself. If Dachigam’s forests fall silent, so too will the streams that sustain Srinagar’s lakes and farmlands. Conservation, therefore, is not merely an environmental duty but a moral and social imperative.
The challenges are real and growing. Climate change has begun to alter snowfall patterns and vegetation cycles, affecting both plant and animal behavior. Warmer winters shorten hibernation periods for bears and disrupt the breeding patterns of deer. At the same time, rising tourism and urbanization increase human presence in sensitive zones, amplifying stress on the park’s limited resources. These issues demand scientific management, sustained funding, and active community engagement – not sporadic interventions.
For local residents living near Dachigam, sustainable livelihoods are key to reducing pressure on natural resources. Eco-guiding, handicrafts, regulated tourism services, and environmental education programs can provide economic alternatives that align with conservation goals. When communities become stakeholders rather than bystanders, protection becomes more effective and enduring.
Today, as the world grapples with biodiversity loss, Dachigam stands as both a warning and a beacon. It warns of what can happen when neglect and exploitation overtake care and stewardship. Yet it also offers hope – that with awareness, science, and community effort, fragile ecosystems can still recover. The slow but steady rise in the Hangul population, however modest, proves that nature responds positively when given space and protection.
Dachigam is not merely a park on a map; it is a living, breathing system that connects the mountains to the valley, the forests to the city, and the wild to the human spirit. Its preservation demands more than regulations – it requires respect, restraint, and recognition of its priceless value. Every visitor, policymaker, and citizen has a role to play in ensuring that this sanctuary endures.
The quiet rustle of leaves, the flowing streams, and the distant call of the Hangul remind us that true progress lies not in expansion, but in coexistence. If Kashmir is the paradise on earth, then Dachigam is its living heart – beating with the rhythm of nature, fragile yet eternal, waiting to be protected for generations yet to come.

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