National
Parks in IndiaIndia's national parks teem with an
astounding variety of animal and plant life. Ranthambor encompasses nearly
152 square miles of dry deciduous forest in southwestern Rajasthan, where
the landscape is dotted with ancient banyan trees, dhok and pipal trees,
clusters of mango trees and and evergreens. The diversity of flora there
includes 300 trees and 50 aquatic plants.
As for fauna, India's
parks play an enormously significant role in the protection of India's wild
animals, including its tiger population. The parks provide a safe haven for
tigers, which outside the parks are forced to compete with about 100 million
humans who make their livelihood from India's forests. Indian tigers were
once threatened by the shooting safaris of the Maharajas and British
colonists, but today an even greater threat is posed by the demand for tiger
bones and other body parts demanded by the practitioners of"traditional"
medicine in certain regions of Asia.
India's parks protect other
species of wildlife, too. For example, Little Rann of Kutch, Gujarat,
situated in the Thar Desert, is a sanctuary for the last population of
Indian wild ass, and India's greatest bird sanctuary can be found in
Keoladeo Ghana National Park, more commonly known by its old name,
Bharatpur. Formerly the shooting preserve of the Maharaja of Bharatpur,
where in 1938 the Viceroy of India's party shot 4,273 birds in one day,
today the park protects 3,000 species of bird.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bandhavgarh
Wildlife Park

Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve is located between the Vindhyan hill range and the
esstern flank of Satpu8ra hill range, and falls in the Shahdol and Jabalpur
districts of the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh. The Reserve gets its name
from the highest hill, Bandhavharh (807m),located in the center of the
Reserve.. A chain of smaller hills, thirty -two in all, surround this hill
forming a number of valleys and spurs in between. Bertica cliffs are more
prominent around number of grassy meadows, such as Chalradhara, Rajbsahera,
is of sandstone, water percolates through it, forming a number of perennial
streams and springs. The western parts of the Reserve and Panpatha Sanctuary
area are more of less plain. The hills are mainly flat- topped. The meadows
in certain areas ate marshy.
:: Know
More
Corbett
Wildlife Park
Corbett has aptly been described as
the land of the Roar, Trumpet and Song. It represents a scene of remarkable
beauty. Corbett had the proud distinction of being the chosen venue for the
inauguration of Project Tiger in India. The rich bio-diversity of the
Reserve is partly attributed to the variety of habitat found here. Due to
the location of the Reserve in the foothills of the Central Himalayas, both
Himalayan and peninsular flora and fauna is found in the Reserve.
:: Know
More
Pench
Wildlife ParkPench Tiger Reserve is named after
the Pench River, which flows from north to south through the Reserve. The
Reserve is located in the southern reaches of the Satpura hill range in the
Seoni and Chhindwara districts in the Madhya Pradesh State of India. The
terrain is undulating, with most of the area covered by small hills, steeply
sloping on the sides.
::
Know
More Ranthambore
Wildlife ParkRanthambhore Tiger Reserve in the
Indian state of Rajasthan comprises distinct areas with varied conservation
and virtually separated geographically, with mere narrow corridors linking
them to the core, Ranthambhore National Park, Keladeve Sanctuary and Sawai
Mansingh Sanctuary.
::
Know
More Kanha
Wildlife Park Kanha Tiger Reserve comparieses
parts of the Mandla, Balaghat, Kwardha and dinodor distrcts fothe Indian
state fo Madhya Pradesh. It is located in the Malkal hills of the Satpura
hill range Kanha is internationally renowned for its rich floral and faunal
attributes.
::
Know
More
Bandipur
Wildlife Park
Bandipur Tiger Reserve is situated
in Mysore district of the Indian state of Karnataka. This Reserve was among
the first nine Tiger Reserves created in India at the launch of Project
Tiger in 1973.
:: Know
More
Panna
Wildlife Park Panna is situated in the Vindhyan
hill range and spreads over Panna and Chhtarpur districts in the northern
part of the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh (M.P.). One of the most
significant ecological aspects of the Reserve is that the district Panna
makes the northern most boundary of natural distribution of teak and the
eastern limits of teak-kardhai (Anogeissus pendula) mixed forests.
::
Know
More
Gir
Wildlife Park Located in the south west of the
Saurashtra peninsula, the Gir National Park is a haven to about 300 Asiatic
lions. The 1,412.13 sq. km. Park has a rugged terrain and the steep rocky
hillsides are covered in mixed deciduous forests
:: Know
More
Dudhwa
Wildlife Park
Dudhwa Tiger Reserve has two core
areas- Dudhwa National Park and Kishanpur Wildlife Sanctuary. These are 15
km apart, with agricultural land in between. Dudhwa National Park is
situated on the Indo-Nepal border in the Lakhimpur-Kheri district in Uttar
Pradesh. The Mohana river flowing along the Indo-Nepal border constitutes
the northern boundary of the Park whilst the southern boundary is formed by
the river Suheli. The Kishanpur Sanctuary lies in the Lakhimpur-Kheri and
Shahajahanpur districts in Uttar Pradesh.
:: Know
More
Sunderbans
Wildlife ParkSunderbans in the Indian state of
West Bengal is the estuarine phase of the Ganga as well as of the
Brahmaputra river systems. This littoral forest is the only ecological
habitat of the tiger of its kind not only in India but also in the world,
except in Bangladesh. The typical littoral forests of Sundarbans comprises
of a host of trees species adopted to the peculiar estuarine condition of
high salinity, lack of soil erosion and daily inundation by high tides.
::
Know
More
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------