CORE Legal map of Indian conservation areas
India's conservation-area system is built on legal categories first and ecological labels second. The Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 protected-area categories cover national parks, wildlife sanctuaries, conservation reserves and community reserves; a national park gives the strongest closure because ordinary human activity is barred unless the Chief Wildlife Warden permits it under the Act. The Wildlife Institute of India lists 106 national parks in India in its National Wildlife Database, so the legal category and the current national inventory move together. Conservation reserves and community reserves were added through the Wildlife (Protection) Amendment Act, 2002 to protect buffers, connectors and migration corridors around established protected areas. Rajasthan makes the distinction visible: Keoladeo National Park, Bharatpur is a national park and World Heritage wetland, while community-linked corridors around Sariska and Ranthambore matter because wildlife movement does not stop at a notified boundary.
