Graduate Level intermediate Forests Vegetation Forest Policy Indian Geography
Forests & Vegetation of India: Types, Policy, and Conservation
Complete study notes on Indian forest types, national forest policy, social forestry, Van Mahotsav, and forest conservation. Essential for Kerala PSC Graduate Level exams.
Complete study notes on Indian forest types, national forest policy, social forestry, Van Mahotsav, and forest conservation. Essential for Kerala PSC Graduate Level exams.
You've read 5 free study notes. Sign in to unlock all 270+ notes.
Free forever — no payment needed for study notes.
Or
Forest types and forest policy are regularly tested in Kerala PSC geography sections. Questions focus on classification, area coverage, national policies, and important schemes. The tables below cover all exam-relevant content.
1. Forest Cover in India — Key Statistics
Parameter
Value
Total geographical area of India
32,87,263 sq km
Total forest cover (ISFR 2023)
8,27,357 sq km (25.17% of geographical area)
Very Dense Forest
99,779 sq km (3.04%)
Moderately Dense Forest
3,06,890 sq km (9.33%)
Open Forest
4,20,688 sq km (12.80%)
Target (National Forest Policy 1988)
33% of geographical area
State with highest forest cover (area)
Madhya Pradesh
State with highest forest cover (% of area)
Mizoram
UT with highest forest cover (%)
Lakshadweep (90.33%)
2. Classification of Indian Forests by Champion and Seth (1968)
Forest Type
Rainfall
Region
Key Species
Tropical Evergreen
More than 200 cm
Western Ghats, NE India, Andaman Islands
Rosewood, Mahogany, Ebony
Tropical Semi-Evergreen
200-250 cm
Western Ghats fringe, Assam
Laurel, Rosewood, Cedar
Tropical Moist Deciduous
100-200 cm
Eastern slopes of Western Ghats, Jharkhand, Odisha
Teak, Sal, Bamboo
Tropical Dry Deciduous
70-100 cm
Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh
Teak, Sal, Neem, Peepal
Tropical Thorn
Less than 70 cm
Rajasthan, Gujarat, SW Punjab
Babool, Khejri, Cactus
Montane Wet Temperate
150-300 cm (high altitude)
Nilgiris, Palani Hills, NE hills above 1800m
Magnolia, Rhododendron
Montane Dry Temperate
Low rainfall at high altitude
Ladakh, Himachal (dry inner valleys)
Juniper, Deodar
Alpine
Above 3600m
Higher Himalayas
Birch, Rhododendron, Moss
Mangrove
Tidal/coastal
Sundarbans, Bhitarkanika, Pichavaram
Sundari, Rhizophora
Littoral/Swamp
Brackish/freshwater swamps
Coastal Kerala, Odisha
Casuarina, Coconut Palm
3. Most Commercially Important Species
Species
Forest Type
Key Producing States
Teak (Sagwan)
Moist and Dry Deciduous
Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Kerala, Karnataka
Sal
Moist Deciduous
Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, UP
Sandalwood
Dry Deciduous
Karnataka (Mysore region)
Rosewood
Tropical Evergreen
Kerala, Karnataka
Deodar
Himalayan Temperate
Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand
4. National Forest Policies
Policy
Year
Key Provisions
First Forest Policy
1894
Forests for state revenue; commercial exploitation
Indian Forest Act
1927
Classified forests into Reserved, Protected, Village forests
National Forest Policy
1952
Target: 33% forest cover (60% in hills, 20% in plains)
National Forest Policy
1988
Environmental stability over revenue; joint forest management; peoples participation
Forest Conservation Act
1980 (amended 2023)
Prior Central approval needed for diversion of forest land for non-forest use
Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act
2006
Recognises rights of tribals and traditional forest dwellers over forest land
5. Social Forestry and Agro-Forestry
Programme
Details
Social Forestry
Planting on common village lands, roadsides, canal banks for community benefit
Farm Forestry
Planting trees on private farmland
Agro-Forestry
Integration of trees with crops and/or livestock on the same land
Joint Forest Management (JFM)
Community-government partnership for forest protection; started in 1990
Van Mahotsav
Tree-planting festival; started by K.M. Munshi in 1950; observed in July
6. Important National Parks and Tiger Reserves (Forest Context)
Reserve/Park
State
Forest Type
Jim Corbett
Uttarakhand
Moist Deciduous + Sal
Bandipur
Karnataka
Dry Deciduous
Silent Valley
Kerala
Tropical Evergreen (Rainforest)
Sundarbans
West Bengal
Mangrove
Kaziranga
Assam
Tropical Semi-Evergreen + Grassland
7. Forests in Kerala
Feature
Detail
Forest cover (ISFR 2023)
21,253 sq km (54.72% of state area)
Forest type dominant
Tropical Evergreen and Moist Deciduous
Important species
Teak, Rosewood, Sandalwood, Bamboo
Silent Valley
Tropical rainforest in Palakkad; saved from hydroelectric project by protest movement (1970s-80s)
Nilambur Teak Plantation
Oldest teak plantation in the world (established 1842)
Parambikulam Tiger Reserve
Kannimara Teak — world’s tallest and largest teak tree
Mangroves
Found in Kadalundi, Kannur, and Vembanad areas
8. Forest Classification by Ownership
Type
Description
Reserved Forest
Fully protected by government; no public entry without permission
Protected Forest
Government-controlled but certain activities allowed with regulation
Village Forest
Community forest for local use; managed by village panchayat
Private Forest
Owned by individuals or corporations
9. Important International Conventions
Convention
Year
Focus
CITES
1973
Trade in endangered species
Ramsar Convention
1971
Wetland conservation
Earth Summit (UNCED)
1992
Statement of Forest Principles; Convention on Biological Diversity
Kyoto Protocol
1997
Greenhouse gas reduction; forests as carbon sinks
Paris Agreement
2015
Climate targets; India pledged additional forest/tree cover of 2.5-3 billion tonnes CO2 equivalent
10. Previous Year Question Patterns
“National Forest Policy target for forest cover?” — 33%
“Van Mahotsav was started by?” — K.M. Munshi (1950)
“Oldest teak plantation in the world?” — Nilambur
“State with largest forest area?” — Madhya Pradesh
“Forest Conservation Act was passed in?” — 1980
“Silent Valley is in which district?” — Palakkad
“Joint Forest Management started in?” — 1990
“Forest Rights Act year?” — 2006
Forest types and forest policy are regularly tested in Kerala PSC geography sections. Questions focus on classification, area coverage, national policies, and important schemes. The tables below cover all exam-relevant content.
1. Forest Cover in India — Key Statistics
Parameter
Value
Total geographical area of India
32,87,263 sq km
Total forest cover (ISFR 2023)
8,27,357 sq km (25.17% of geographical area)
Very Dense Forest
99,779 sq km (3.04%)
Moderately Dense Forest
3,06,890 sq km (9.33%)
Open Forest
4,20,688 sq km (12.80%)
Target (National Forest Policy 1988)
33% of geographical area
State with highest forest cover (area)
Madhya Pradesh
State with highest forest cover (% of area)
Mizoram
UT with highest forest cover (%)
Lakshadweep (90.33%)
2. Classification of Indian Forests by Champion and Seth (1968)
Forest Type
Rainfall
Region
Key Species
Tropical Evergreen
More than 200 cm
Western Ghats, NE India, Andaman Islands
Rosewood, Mahogany, Ebony
Tropical Semi-Evergreen
200-250 cm
Western Ghats fringe, Assam
Laurel, Rosewood, Cedar
Tropical Moist Deciduous
100-200 cm
Eastern slopes of Western Ghats, Jharkhand, Odisha
Teak, Sal, Bamboo
Tropical Dry Deciduous
70-100 cm
Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh
Teak, Sal, Neem, Peepal
Tropical Thorn
Less than 70 cm
Rajasthan, Gujarat, SW Punjab
Babool, Khejri, Cactus
Montane Wet Temperate
150-300 cm (high altitude)
Nilgiris, Palani Hills, NE hills above 1800m
Magnolia, Rhododendron
Montane Dry Temperate
Low rainfall at high altitude
Ladakh, Himachal (dry inner valleys)
Juniper, Deodar
Alpine
Above 3600m
Higher Himalayas
Birch, Rhododendron, Moss
Mangrove
Tidal/coastal
Sundarbans, Bhitarkanika, Pichavaram
Sundari, Rhizophora
Littoral/Swamp
Brackish/freshwater swamps
Coastal Kerala, Odisha
Casuarina, Coconut Palm
3. Most Commercially Important Species
Species
Forest Type
Key Producing States
Teak (Sagwan)
Moist and Dry Deciduous
Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Kerala, Karnataka
Sal
Moist Deciduous
Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, UP
Sandalwood
Dry Deciduous
Karnataka (Mysore region)
Rosewood
Tropical Evergreen
Kerala, Karnataka
Deodar
Himalayan Temperate
Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand
4. National Forest Policies
Policy
Year
Key Provisions
First Forest Policy
1894
Forests for state revenue; commercial exploitation
Indian Forest Act
1927
Classified forests into Reserved, Protected, Village forests
National Forest Policy
1952
Target: 33% forest cover (60% in hills, 20% in plains)
National Forest Policy
1988
Environmental stability over revenue; joint forest management; peoples participation
Forest Conservation Act
1980 (amended 2023)
Prior Central approval needed for diversion of forest land for non-forest use
Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act
2006
Recognises rights of tribals and traditional forest dwellers over forest land
5. Social Forestry and Agro-Forestry
Programme
Details
Social Forestry
Planting on common village lands, roadsides, canal banks for community benefit
Farm Forestry
Planting trees on private farmland
Agro-Forestry
Integration of trees with crops and/or livestock on the same land
Joint Forest Management (JFM)
Community-government partnership for forest protection; started in 1990
Van Mahotsav
Tree-planting festival; started by K.M. Munshi in 1950; observed in July
6. Important National Parks and Tiger Reserves (Forest Context)
Reserve/Park
State
Forest Type
Jim Corbett
Uttarakhand
Moist Deciduous + Sal
Bandipur
Karnataka
Dry Deciduous
Silent Valley
Kerala
Tropical Evergreen (Rainforest)
Sundarbans
West Bengal
Mangrove
Kaziranga
Assam
Tropical Semi-Evergreen + Grassland
7. Forests in Kerala
Feature
Detail
Forest cover (ISFR 2023)
21,253 sq km (54.72% of state area)
Forest type dominant
Tropical Evergreen and Moist Deciduous
Important species
Teak, Rosewood, Sandalwood, Bamboo
Silent Valley
Tropical rainforest in Palakkad; saved from hydroelectric project by protest movement (1970s-80s)
Nilambur Teak Plantation
Oldest teak plantation in the world (established 1842)
Parambikulam Tiger Reserve
Kannimara Teak — world’s tallest and largest teak tree
Mangroves
Found in Kadalundi, Kannur, and Vembanad areas
8. Forest Classification by Ownership
Type
Description
Reserved Forest
Fully protected by government; no public entry without permission
Protected Forest
Government-controlled but certain activities allowed with regulation
Village Forest
Community forest for local use; managed by village panchayat
Private Forest
Owned by individuals or corporations
9. Important International Conventions
Convention
Year
Focus
CITES
1973
Trade in endangered species
Ramsar Convention
1971
Wetland conservation
Earth Summit (UNCED)
1992
Statement of Forest Principles; Convention on Biological Diversity
Kyoto Protocol
1997
Greenhouse gas reduction; forests as carbon sinks
Paris Agreement
2015
Climate targets; India pledged additional forest/tree cover of 2.5-3 billion tonnes CO2 equivalent
10. Previous Year Question Patterns
“National Forest Policy target for forest cover?” — 33%
“Van Mahotsav was started by?” — K.M. Munshi (1950)
“Oldest teak plantation in the world?” — Nilambur
“State with largest forest area?” — Madhya Pradesh