Silent Valley National Park
Context: Recently a bird survey was conducted at the Silent Valley National Park in Kerala which identified 141 species, of which 17 were new.
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- Atleast 17 new birds species were found in the survey. Prominent among them are Brown wood owl, Banded bay cuckoo, Malabar wood shrike, White-throated kingfisher, Indian nightjar, Jungle nightjar, and Large cuckoo shrike.
About Silent Valley National Park
- Silent Valley National Park represent the last remaining rain forest of Kerala. It was declared as National Park in 1984.
- The forests of the Silent Valley National Park harbour some of the most pristine, unique and highly productive forests in the world.
- The Park has exceptional species diversity and endemic value of Evergreen and Semi Evergreen communities.
- It constitute 41 mammals, 211 birds, 49 reptiles, 47 amphibians, 12 fishes, 164 butterflies and 400 species of moths.
- The National Park also harbors a viable population of Lion tailed macaques which also is the flagship species of the Park.
- Irulas, Kurumbas, Mudugas and Kattunaikkars are the indigenous tribal groups that live within park boundaries.
- Birds species such as Crimson-backed sunbird, Yellow-browed bulbul, Black bulbul, Indian white-eye and Indian swiftlet were found in large number in Silent Valley.
Major Rivers which through the National Park
- A perennial river named Kunthipuzha passes through the western side of the park, from north to south direction finally merging in to Bharathapuzha.
- The Bhavani River is a tributary of the Cauvery, It originates in Nilgiris, draining the south slope of the Nilgiri Hills.
National Parks in India
- National Park is an area strictly reserved and protected by the government to preserve the endangered species of plants and animals generally termed as the flora and fauna.
- Both central and State government can declare an area as national park.
- No alteration in the boundaries of a national park can be made except on a resolution passed by the State Legislature.
- No Human activity is allowed in the national park and it cannot be downgrade to wildlife sanctuary.
- There are 106 national parks in India covering an area of 44,372.42 km2, which constitute 1.35% of the geographical area of the country.
- Hemis National Park in Ladakh is the biggest National Park in India, with Madhya Pradesh being the state having largest number of national park.