Written By
Ruchika Mandora
Ranthambore is a 1,134-square-kilometer national park. This Sawai Madhopur tiger reserve was the royal Jaipur Maharajas' favorite hunting spot.
Sambar, langur, wild boar, and 900–1000 elephants live in this forests. The 35–40 tigers here are rarely seen.
Its 500-square-kilometer core is in Uttar Pradesh's Patli Dun valley. This park has stunning scenery at the base of the Himalayas on the Ramganga River.
Sunderban houses the Royal Bengal tiger over 2585 sq km. Aquatic animals and reptiles are among its many endangered species.
Bandipur has abundant fauna and greenery. Tigers, sloth bears, Indian rock pythons, jackals, dholes, and Indian elephants live there.
Sariska National Park is 200 miles from Delhi and 107 km from Jaipur, where visitors can see Bengal tigers, Indian leopards, and crocodiles.
This "Tiger land" is immortalized by its breathtaking scenery, including a horseshoe valley. This reserve has beautiful Banjar forests and Halon valley.
Tigers, leopards, wolves, hyenas, wild dogs, and sloth bears inhabit Panna National Park.
543 plant species and unspoiled Terai-Bhabar grasslands make Manas rich in biodiversity. Manas represents pre-human Earth.
Tadoba National Park covers 1725 sq.km in a protected forest. Teak and bamboo cover the firest.