Pittachhara Forest & Biodiversity Conservation Initiative

Key species

Hill forest species

Location

Matiranga, Khagrachari

Status

Active

Duration

2017 – present

Target community

Local people

About the project

The Pittachhara Forest & Biodiversity Conservation Initiative is a landscape restoration and conservation project led by Pittachhara Trust to secure and restore privately purchased degraded hill forest land in southwest hill tracts of Bangladesh. The initiative aims to protect remnant hill forest habitat, restore ecological integrity and create a long-term biodiversity refuge in a region under increasing pressure from logging, encroachment and land conversion.

SCOPE Foundation serves as the technical and strategic conservation partner to Pittachhara Trust. SCOPE provides scientific guidance, ecological restoration planning, biodiversity monitoring design, conservation goal-setting and financial support to ensure that land acquisition and restoration efforts are grounded in evidence-based conservation principles.

 

The problem

– rapid loss and degradation of hill forest habitats in Bangladesh

– conversion of forest land into plantations, agriculture and settlements

– lack of long-term, privately secured conservation areas outside government protected forests

The cause

– deforestation and unsustainable extraction of timber and forest resources

– absence of structured restoration planning on degraded private land

– limited protecting existing hill forests and absence ecological restoration planning in newly acquired degraded lands

The solution

– secure degraded forest land under private conservation ownership

– implement science-based ecological restoration and habitat recovery

– implement science-based biodiversity monitoring to guide adaptive management

Project Goal

To restore and conserve degraded forest habitat in Pittachhara as a long-term biodiversity refuge through private land protection, ecological restoration and evidence-based management.

Project Objectives

– protect existing and restore degraded forest through assisted natural regeneration and targeted planting

– monitor biodiversity recovery using structured scientific protocols

– reduce local pressures such as illegal logging and habitat disturbance

– establish Pittachhara as a model of private forest conservation in Bangladesh

Pittachhara project location

Activities

Pittachhara Trust secured degraded forest land to prevent further conversion and initiate restoration. Assisted natural regeneration and enrichment planting with native species were implemented, alongside protection from grazing and logging.

In 2023, over 3,000 native seedlings representing 38 species were collected from mature forest patches and nearby forests, and a nursery was established with local community involvement. In 2024, more than 2,000 surviving seedlings were planted in the newly acquired degraded area, followed by regular maintenance and survival monitoring.

SCOPE provided technical and strategic support, including restoration planning, species selection guidance, monitoring framework design, and biodiversity assessment. Long-term bird monitoring transects were established across both the existing forest and restoration patches, with seasonal surveys conducted in 2023 and 2024 using standardized point-count methods.

Community engagement initiatives were undertaken to promote local stewardship. A bird hide was constructed to support responsible birdwatching and future conservation-linked income generation, and binoculars were donated to strengthen local biodiversity monitoring capacity.

Pittachhara land owner (Mahfuz Russel) using Oriental Bird Club donated binoculars to monitor local biodiversity

Outcomes

Degraded forest land has been secured under conservation management and restored through the planting of more than 2,000 native seedlings, significantly increasing vegetation cover and supporting natural regeneration.

Seasonal monitoring recorded 60 bird species across forest and restoration patches, providing a structured biodiversity baseline and early evidence of ecological recovery. Monitoring protocols are now in place to assess long-term restoration impact.

The initiative demonstrates that privately secured forest land, supported by scientific planning and monitoring, can contribute meaningfully to biodiversity conservation in Bangladesh. The partnership between Pittachhara Trust and SCOPE Foundation offers a replicable model for private protected area development in the country.

Pittachhara hill forest restoration impact

Meet the Team

Pittachhara land owner (Mahfuz Russel) using Oriental Bird Club donated binoculars to monitor local biodiversity

Mahfuz Russel

Project Lead

SCOPE survey team and Pittachhara land owner (Mahfuz Russel)

SCOPE science team

Project Design

Image Library

Our Partners and Donors

Facebook
LinkedIn
X