Maharashtra
Uran Mangroves
- 27 Nov 2025
- 2 min read
Why in News?
Large stretches of mangroves in Uran are showing natural regeneration after years of illegal destruction, debris dumping, and neglect.
Key Points
- Uran lies in the Raigad district of Maharashtra, forming a crucial part of the Navi Mumbai mangrove belt and the Mumbai Metropolitan Region’s (MMR) coastal ecosystem.
- The region includes ecologically sensitive wetland clusters such as Panje Wetland, Karnala bird corridor link, Belpada, Bokadvira, and TS Chanakya marshes.
- The mangroves mainly consist of Avicennia marina, a hardy species capable of surviving high salinity and pollution.
- These mangroves act as natural flood barriers, carbon sinks, and buffers against cyclones and storm surges in the Mumbai harbour region.
- Uran is a vital habitat along the Central Asian Flyway, attracting migratory birds like flamingos, sandpipers, godwits, herons, and raptors.
- Key threats include port expansion (JNPT), CIDCO development projects, highways, industrial effluents, debris dumping, landfilling, and encroachments.