, March 2 (IANS) Twenty-two adult gharials have been sighted at the Hastinapur Wildlife Sanctuary in the just-concluded census conducted on the 170-km-stretch between the Bijnor and Narora barrage.With a survival rate of just 0.5 per cent, the .
Twenty-two adult gharials have been sighted at the Hastinapur Wildlife Sanctuary in the just-concluded census conducted on the 170-km-stretch between the Bijnor and Narora barrage.
Updated:
Project comes after success of the first phase of rehabilitating critically endangered species
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Critically endangered gharials (Gavialis gangeticus) being released in the Beas conservation reserve Punjab department of forests and wildlife preservation in association with WWF-India, February 12, 2021
| Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
Project comes after success of the first phase of rehabilitating critically endangered species
Buoyed by the success of the first phase of rehabilitating critically endangered gharials (
Gavialis gangeticus) in the rivers of Punjab, the State Department of Forests and Wildlife Preservation on Friday released 23 captive-bred gharials in the Beas conservation reserve.
Earlier, in 2017-18, during the first phase of ‘Gharial Reintroduction Project’ as many as 47 gharials were released in the Beas conservation reserve in batches in Amritsar and Tarn Taran districts.