Amchang Wildlife Sanctuary.

News: In the Amchang Wildlife Sanctuary, the Indian Army created a special environment that allows for peaceful coexistence with wild elephants.

The Amchang Wildlife Sanctuary is in the Assam state.

It consists of the Khanapara, Amchang, and South Amchang Reserve Forests.

It forms a continuous forest belt that runs across the Maradakdola Reserve woods of Meghalaya, extending from the Brahmaputra River in the north to the mountainous woods of that state in the south.

East Himalayan Mixed Deciduous Forest, Eastern Alluvial Secondary Semi-evergreen Forests, and Khasi Hill Sal Forests are examples of the region’s floral diversity.

Animals: Hoolock gibbon, Flying fox, Slow loris, Assamese macaque, Rhesus macaque, and porcupine. Slender-billed vulture, White-backed vulture.

The Amchang wildlife reserve is home to tree yellow butterflies (gancana harina), which are native to Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, and northeast India.