India's treasures of flora and fauna are fast expanding, it won't be long before dry patches and barren lands replace green jungles. India's mighty Himalayan are dotted with thick tropical forests and coniferous woodlands. Kerala and Andaman Islands, the coastal regions of India are blessed with the most affluent rain forests arrayed with the stretches of coconut trees. The Sunderbans are the forests where the Ganga and the Brahmaputra rivers finish their last lap on land before flowing into the Bay of Bengal. Thar Desert of India shows vegetation of short and stout trees stunted by the scorching sun. The plant kingdom is not the only endangered species. India's rich fauna is known the world over, the great Bengal Tiger, The great Asiatic Lion, the great one-horned-rhino, the great Indian elephant and the long list of unending wildlife is the great source of attraction for the tourist from all over the globe.
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India has a wealth of about 80 National Parks and 441 sanctuaries. Many of the wildlife sanctuaries and a few national parks have been established in erstwhile private hunting reserves of the British Raj and Indian aristocracy. often, a park is better known for a particular animal. Travel to Gir National Park in Gujarat, famous for its Asiatic lions, the Indian rhinoceros is the pride of Kaziranga (Assam), elephants steal the show in Periyar (Kerala), and tigers are synonymous with Kanha (Madhya Pradesh) and Bandavgarh (Madhya Pradesh). The mangrove forests of Sunderbans are the unique habitat of the Royal Bengal Tiger..
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India - a country of diverse wildlife is home to a large variety of birds and animals. There is a splendid assortment of colourful birds, with different species found only in certain parts of the country. Here we present a collection of more than 20 types of birds, each famous for its special features: Blue Jay, Sarus Crane, White Ibis, Rosy Pelican, Pied Kingfisher and many more...
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With the excessive consumerism of an ever-swelling population, it is no longer possible to dismiss terms like ‘ecology’ and ‘environment’. The need for conservation of the environment and forests had already occurred to Emperor Ashoka in the 3rd century B.C., and yet never before has the call for conservation been more desperate than it is today. The notions of growth, progress and modernisation are to be carefully weighed for their pros and cons, in order to avoid inheriting ecological disasters, gas leaks, inundating dams, nuclear fallouts, bombs…the list is unending.
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State Wildlife Attraction in India
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