Background and Location
Nameri Tiger Reserve is an important protected area located in the Sonitpur district of Assam, along the foothills of Arunachal Pradesh. It lies in the Eastern Himalayan foothill landscape, which is one of India’s richest biodiversity regions.
The reserve forms part of the Brahmaputra north bank landscape. This makes it ecologically significant because the forests of this region are connected with protected areas in Arunachal Pradesh, especially Pakke Tiger Reserve.
Key location facts:
- State: Assam
- District: Sonitpur
- Major river: Jia-Bhoreli River
- Nearby protected area: Pakke Tiger Reserve, Arunachal Pradesh
- Landscape: Eastern Himalayan foothills
- Conservation status: Part of Project Tiger
Nameri National Park forms the core of the tiger reserve. The reserve includes forest patches, riverine areas, grasslands and wetlands, making it suitable for tigers, elephants, birds and aquatic species.
Ecological Significance
Nameri Tiger Reserve is important because it represents a mix of forest, riverine and grassland ecosystems. The Jia-Bhoreli River plays a major role in shaping the ecology of the reserve by supporting wetlands, fish species, riverine forests and grassland habitats.
The reserve is especially known for the White-winged Wood Duck, a rare and threatened bird species. Apart from this, Nameri also supports several important wildlife species.
Important species found here include:
- Royal Bengal Tiger
- Asian Elephant
- Leopard
- Clouded Leopard
- Wild Dog
- Gaur
- Sambar
- Hog Deer
- White-winged Wood Duck
- Rufous-necked Hornbill
- Golden Mahseer
Its connection with Pakke Tiger Reserve makes it important for wildlife movement. Large animals such as tigers and elephants require connected habitats, and Nameri helps maintain this landscape-level connectivity between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh.
Recent Developments
Nameri Tiger Reserve recently came into focus because of reports of an increase in its tiger population. The tiger number reportedly increased from 3 in 2022 to 12 by the end of 2025, showing improvement in conservation efforts and habitat protection.
Another important development is the reported return of tigers to the Sonai-Rupai Wildlife Sanctuary, which functions as a satellite core in the larger Nameri landscape. This highlights that tiger conservation cannot be limited to only one national park or core area. It requires protection of the entire connected landscape.
The reserve is also periodically closed for tourism during the monsoon season. Such seasonal restrictions are important because Nameri is a riverine and flood-prone landscape. During heavy rainfall, both wildlife movement and visitor safety become sensitive issues.
Key Challenges
Nameri faces the challenge of maintaining its ecological balance while dealing with human pressure around the reserve. Since it is located near forest-fringe settlements, issues such as grazing, resource dependence and human-wildlife conflict can affect conservation.
Major challenges include:
- Habitat disturbance: Pressure from surrounding human activities can affect wildlife movement and prey availability.
- Invasive species: Plants such as Mikania and Eupatorium can disturb grassland ecosystems.
- Flood vulnerability: Being a riverine reserve, Nameri is affected by monsoon floods, which can disrupt patrolling, tourism and wildlife movement.
- Human-wildlife conflict: Elephants and large carnivores moving near human settlements may create conflict situations.
- Corridor protection: Connectivity with Pakke Tiger Reserve and nearby forests must be maintained for long-term survival of wide-ranging species.
The main concern is that if surrounding corridors are fragmented, then the reserve may become ecologically isolated. This would reduce its ability to support healthy tiger and elephant populations in the long run.
Way Forward
Nameri should be managed through a landscape-based conservation approach. This means the focus should not remain only on the core tiger reserve, but also on nearby forests, wildlife corridors, river systems and community areas.
Important measures include:
- Strengthening coordination between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh for managing the Nameri-Pakke landscape.
- Protecting wildlife corridors to ensure free movement of tigers, elephants and other species.
- Restoring grasslands and wetlands by controlling invasive species.
- Improving scientific monitoring through camera traps, prey-base estimation and habitat mapping.
- Regulating tourism, especially during monsoon and flood-prone periods.
- Involving local communities through eco-development, livelihood support and quick compensation in conflict cases.
Nameri Tiger Reserve shows that conservation in Northeast India depends on protecting not only individual species, but also rivers, forests, grasslands, corridors and local communities together.



