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About Bharatpur Bird Sanctuary .
One of the finest bird parks in the world, Bharatpur Bird
Sanctuary (Keoladeo Ghana Natiuonal Park) is a reserve that
offers protection to faunal species as well. Nesting indigenous
water- birds as well as migratory water birds and waterside
birds, this sanctuary is also inhabited by Sambar, Chital,
Nilgai and Boar.
Flora in Bharatpur
More than 300 species of birds are found in this small wildlife
park of 29-sq-kms of which 11-sq-kms are marshes and the rest
scrubland and grassland. Keoladeo, the name derives from an
ancient Hindu temple, devoted to Lord Shiva, which stands at the
centre of the park. 'Ghana' means dense, referring to the thick
forest, which used to cover the area.
A Man Made Natural World
While many of India's parks have been developed from the hunting
preserves of princely India, Keoladeo, popularly known as
Bharatpur Wildlife Sanctuary, is perhaps the only case where the
habitat has been created by a maharaja. In earlier times,
Bharatpur town used to be flooded regularly every monsoon. In
1760, an earthen dam (Ajan Dam) was constructed, to save the
town, from this annual vagary of nature. The depression created
by extraction of soil for the dam was cleared and this became
the Bharatpur Lake.
At the beginning of this century, this lake was developed, and
was divided into several portions. A system of small dams,
dykes, sluice gates, etc., was created to control water level in
different sections. This became the hunting preserve of the
Bharatpur royalty, and one of the best duck - shooting wetlands
in the world. Hunting was prohibited by mid-60s. The area was
declared a national park on 10 March 1982, and accepted as a
World Heritage Site in December 1985. |