📘Q.14 IAS Prelims 2024— Current Affairs (Environment)🧷 Authentic Classroom Explanation by IAS Monk
📌 The Question:
Consider the following statements:
Statement I: The Indian Flying Fox is placed under the “vermin” category in the Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972.
Statement II: The Indian Flying Fox feeds on the blood of other animals.
Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements?
(a) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II explains Statement-I
(b) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct, but Statement-II does not explain Statement-I
(c) Statement-I is correct, but Statement-II is incorrect
(d) Statement-I is incorrect, but Statement-II is correct
✅ Correct Answer: (c)
⚡ Lightning Classroom Explanation:
🔹 Statement I — Correct ✅
The Indian Flying Fox (Pteropus giganteus) was historically placed under Schedule V (Vermin) of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, largely due to its perceived role in orchard damage.
👉 Though its protection status has evolved over time, the question refers to its classification as vermin, which is factually correct in context.
🔹 Statement II — Incorrect ❌
The Indian Flying Fox does NOT feed on blood.
- It is frugivorous and nectarivorous
- Feeds on fruits, nectar, pollen
- Plays a keystone ecological role in:
- Seed dispersal
- Pollination of forest trees
🧠 Blood-feeding bats are vampire bats, found mainly in Latin America, not in India.
📌 Why the confusion?
- Flying foxes are often mistaken as harmful due to:
- Orchard raids (mango, guava, etc.)
- Large roosting colonies
- But ecologically, they are forest regenerators, not predators.
🧠 Curiosity Raiser:
👉 One flying fox can disperse seeds over 50–100 km in a single night, making it vital for tropical forest survival.
📚 Enrich Notes (UPSC Edge):
- Vermin (Schedule V) species could historically be hunted
- Keystone species = species whose removal collapses ecosystems
- Fruit bats ≠ Vampire bats (common UPSC trap)
🕊️ IAS Monk Whisper:
“Sometimes nature’s most accused creatures are its most silent guardians.”
