The objective of the visit is for the ground-zero assessment of the bio-diversity of the unique mangrove eco-system of park.
The national park, a bio-diversity treasure-trove, presently figures in the Ramsar international wetland site. The park figured on the tentative list of future heritage sites of UNESCO in 2009 and made its way to the final list in 2014.
The Odisha government had submitted a dossier, the compilation of which, was made by Dehradun-based Wildlife Institute of India, recommending to UNESCO that the park be declared a World Heritage Site.
"We hope Bhitarkanika gets the tag on merit and the visit of IUCN team is a move towards this direction. This will enable the park to get more funding from the government and international agencies and will also attract more tourists," said Divisional Forest Officer, Rajnagar Mangrove (Wildlife) Forest Division, Bimal Prasanna Acharya.
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Acharya said the local economy would receive the much-needed fillip after the park was declared as heritage site.
M Doak and Renco Van-merm, members of the IUCN technical evaluation team, said "the dossier provided to us by Odisha government has presented graphic details of Bhitarkanika's rich flora and fauna along with unique mangrove eco-system. We are visiting today and would stay here for four days to assess the bio-diversities. Today we caught glimpses of mangrove cover during the course of boat journey to Bhitarkanika."
Bhitarkanika is a unique ecosystem, highly dynamic and at the same time fragile. The delta, the river mouth, the sea, mangrove forest, avian fauna, reptiles, amphibians and fauna and flora contribute to the park's biological diversity.
Under the project, the crocodile population in the park increased from 96 in 1974 to 1,665 his January. Six years ago, the Guinness World Records recorded a 23-foot saltwater crocodile in Bhitarkanika as the largest in the world.
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