Endangered Species in India
Endangered Species in India
Endangered Species in India
Critically Endangered
Himalayan Brown/Red Bear
• Threats: loss of suitable habitat
and persecution by humans
Pygmy Hog (Porcula salvania)
• Is the world's smallest wild pig.
It is one of the most useful
indicators of the management
status of grassland habitats.
• Distribution: Previously spread
across India, Nepal, and Bhutan.
Now only found in Assam
(Manas Wildlife Sanctuary and
its buffer reserves).
• Threats: The main threats are
loss and degradation of
grasslands, dry-season burning,
livestock grazing and
afforestation of grasslands.
Hunting is also a threat.
Andaman White-toothed Shrew
• Distribution: It is endemic to the
South Andaman Island of India.
• They are usually active by
twilight or in the night.
• Threats: Habitat loss due to
selective logging, natural
disasters such as tsunami and
drastic weather change are
thought to contribute to current
population declines.
Namdapha Flying
Squirrel
• It is a unique (the only one in its genus)
flying squirrel that is restricted to a single
valley in the Namdapha N.P. (or) W.L.S. in
Arunachal Pradesh.
• Habitat/distribution: Found only in
Namdapha Tiger Reserve in Arunachal
Pradesh.
• Threats: Hunted for food.
Malabar Civet
• It is endemic to India and was first
reported from Travancore, Kerala.
• It is nocturnal in nature and found
exclusively in the Western Ghats.
• Threats: Deforestation and
commercial plantations are major
threats.
Sumatran Rhinoceros
• The Sumatran Rhinoceros
(Dicerorhinus sumatrensis) is
the smallest and most
endangered of the five
rhinoceros species. It is now
thought to be regionally extinct
in India, though it once occurred
in the foothills of the Himalayas
and north-east India.
• The Javan Rhinoceros
(Rhinoceros sondaicus) is also
believed to be extinct in India
and only a small number survive
in Java and Vietnam.
• Threat: Poaching, loss of habitat.
Kashmir stag/hangul
• It subspecies of Red Deer which is native to
India.
• Habitat: Dense riverine forests, high valleys,
and mountains of the Kashmir valley and
northern Chamba in Himachal Pradesh.
State animal of Jammu and Kashmir.
• Threat: habitat destruction, over-grazing by
domestic livestock, and poaching.
Gharials
• Once thrived in all the major
river systems of the Indian
Subcontinent. Today, they are
extinct in the Indus River, in the
Brahmaputra of Bhutan and
Bangladesh, and in the
Irrawaddy River. Their
distribution is now limited to
only 2% of their former range.
• fish-eating crocodile
• The gharial is one of three
crocodilians native to India, the
other two being the mugger
crocodile and the saltwater
crocodile
‘Endangered’ Mammals