• India
  • Oct 19

Kaziranga is India’s second butterfly biodiversity hotspot

• More than 446 butterfly species have been recorded in Assam’s Kaziranga National Park (KNP), famed for the one-horned rhinoceros, making it a habitat with the second highest concentration in the country after the Namdapha National Park in Arunachal Pradesh.

• The survey was conducted in different parts of the Kaziranga-Karbi Anglong landscape, especially in the Panbari Reserve Forest, which is home to a diverse range of butterfly species.

Kaziranga National Park

• In the heart of Assam, Kaziranga National Park and Tiger Reserve is located on the southern bank of the Brahmaputra River at the foot of the Mikir Hills. The Park lies in the floodplains of the Brahmaputra. 

• Three-quarters or more of the area is submerged annually by the flood waters of the Brahmaputra. 

• It was first constituted as Reserved Forest in 1908.

• This Park is one of the last areas in eastern India undisturbed by a human presence. It is inhabited by the world’s largest population of one-horned rhinoceroses, as well as many mammals, including tigers, elephants, panthers and bears, and thousands of birds.

• It was declared as a National Park in 1974.

• The Kaziranga National Park was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1985.

• Covering 42,996 hectares, it is the single largest undisturbed and representative area in the Brahmaputra Valley floodplain.

• The sanctuary hosts two-thirds of the world’s great one-horned rhinoceroses. Rhinos are listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red list of Threatened Species. 

• Kaziranga is regarded as one of the finest wildlife refuges in the world. The Park’s contribution in saving the Indian one-horned rhinoceros from the brink of extinction at the turn of the 20th century to harbouring the single largest population of this species is a spectacular conservation achievement.

• It is home to the highest density of tigers among protected areas in the world, and was declared a Tiger Reserve in 2006. 

• It is an abode to approximately 478 species of both resident and migratory birds.

• The park has in its vicinity several notified forests and protected areas namely Panbari Reserve Forest and Deopahar Proposed Reserve Forest in Golaghat District, Kukurakata Hill Reserve Forest, Bagser Reserve Forest, Kamakhya Hill Reserve Forest in Nagaon District, Bhumuraguri Reserve Forest in Sonitpur District, North Karbi Anglong Wildlife Sanctuary in Karbi Anglong district. All these areas are of great ecological importance to the Kaziranga National Park.

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