The Namdapha National Park and Tiger Reserve is conducting the 7th Butterfly Meet and Nature Camp at Deban in Arunachal Pradesh’s Changlang district.
Source: The Print
About Namdapha National Park and Tiger Reserve:
It is located in the Changlang District of Arunachal Pradesh, surrounded by Myanmar in the southeast.
It is located at the junction of the Indian subcontinent Biogeographic Region and the Indo-China Biogeographic Region. As a result of this, extensive diversity of flora and fauna is observed in this belt.
This protected area is wedged between the Dapha Bum ridge of Mishmi Hills, of North Eastern Himalayas and the Patkai Ranges.
It has a common boundary with Kamlang Wildlife Sanctuary (Lohit District) and Nampong Forest Division on the south-western side (Changlang District) of Arunachal Pradesh.
The park spans a wide altitudinal range from 200 m to 4,571 m at Dapha Bum, the highest point in the park.
Namdapha is the name of a river which originates from Dapha Bum and meets the Noa-Dihing river (a tributary of the Brahmaputra River).
This river flows right across in a north-south direction of the park and hence the name Namdapha has been given.
Vegetation: The Biomes recognized are evergreen Forests, Moist deciduous forests, subtropical forests, Temperate Forests and Alpine.
Flora:
As many as 150 timber species are found here, with species like Pinus Merkusi and Abies Delavavi being exclusive to the park.
Blue Vanda, a rare and endangered orchard, is also found here.
Then there are medicinal plants like Mishimi Teeta, which is used by the local tribes to treat different types of diseases.
Fauna:
It is the only park in the entire world to have the four feline species of big cat namely the Tiger, Leopard, Snow Leopard, and Clouded Leopard, and numbers of Lesser cats.
It is also home to the distinctive Hoolock Gibbons, highly endangered and only ‘ape’ species found in India.
Other animals found here include elephants, black bear, Indian Bison, pig-tailed macaque, several species of deers, reptiles and a variety of arboreal animals.