Mitiyala Wildlife Sanctuary is a small but important protected area in the Saurashtra region of Gujarat. It is closely linked with the Asiatic lion landscape and is often described as an extension or satellite habitat of the Gir ecosystem.
The sanctuary is important because Asiatic lions are no longer confined only to Gir National Park and Gir Wildlife Sanctuary. Their movement into areas like Mitiyala, Girnar, Pania, coastal belts and other parts of Saurashtra shows the expansion of the wider lion landscape.
Location and Ecological Character
Mitiyala Wildlife Sanctuary is located in Amreli district, Gujarat.
Important facts:
- State: Gujarat
- Region: Saurashtra
- District: Amreli
- Area: about 18.22 sq km
- Notified as sanctuary: 2004
- Landscape link: part of the wider Asiatic lion landscape connected with Gir
The sanctuary has:
- grasslands
- undulating terrain
- scrub vegetation
- semi-dry deciduous patches
- open woodland type habitat
Gujarat Tourism describes Mitiyala as an area of grasslands, undulating hill tracks, tall grasses and semi-dry deciduous trees, and notes that it functions almost like an offshoot of the Gir Lion Sanctuary.
Conservation Significance
Mitiyala is significant mainly because of its role in Asiatic lion conservation.
Its importance includes:
- providing additional habitat outside the core Gir area
- supporting dispersal of lions from Gir
- reducing pressure on the Gir National Park and Sanctuary
- strengthening the wider Saurashtra lion landscape
- helping create multiple lion populations within Gujarat
- supporting prey base and dry forest-grassland biodiversity
The Asiatic lion population in Gujarat increased from 674 in 2020 to 891 in 2025, and a large number of lions are now found outside the traditional Gir protected area. Reports based on the 2025 estimation note that satellite populations outside the core zone include areas such as Mitiyala Wildlife Sanctuary.
This makes Mitiyala important from a conservation-governance point of view. It shows that lion conservation is shifting from a single protected-area model to a landscape-level conservation model.
Key Concerns
Mitiyala’s importance has increased because lion movement outside Gir brings both conservation opportunities and management challenges.
Important concerns include:
- limited sanctuary area
- habitat fragmentation
- pressure from surrounding human settlements
- livestock grazing
- human-lion conflict
- dependence on habitat connectivity with the wider Gir landscape
- risk of disease transmission among lions
- need for strong prey-base management
- pressure from roads, agriculture and land-use change
Conclusion
Mitiyala Wildlife Sanctuary is a small but strategically important protected area in Gujarat’s Asiatic lion landscape.
Its value lies not in its size, but in its role as a satellite habitat for Asiatic lions. It supports lion dispersal, reduces pressure on Gir and strengthens the wider Saurashtra conservation landscape.
For long-term Asiatic lion conservation, areas like Mitiyala are crucial because the future of the species depends on connected habitats, community cooperation and landscape-level protection.


