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Rajaji
National Park is situated along the hills and foothills of
Shiwalik ranges in the Himalayan foothills and represent the
Shiwalik eco-system. Combining three sanctuaries, namely
Chilla, Motichur and Rajaji - Rajaji National Park is spread
over the Pauri Garwal, Dehradun and Saharanpur districts of
Uttarakhand. The Motichur and Rajaji sanctuaries are
contiguous, and are separated from the Chilla Sanctuary to
the south-east by the Ganges River and the Chilla River.
Motichur
and Rajaji wildlife sanctuaries lie to the north and south
of the Siwalik Ridge and are dissected by many ravines
carrying water which descend from the main ridge, becoming
broad pebble/boulder filled streams in the plains. These
streams remain dry for most of the year but become raging
torrents during the monsoon. The area is covered with
diverse forest types ranging from semi-evergreen to
deciduous and from mixed broad-leaved to terai grassland and
has been classified as Indus-Ganges Monsoon Forest type.
Lofty strands of sal dominate in many parts.
Rajaji
is home to avian species which are found in forested
foothills and in open grassland. It's location in a
transition zone between temperate western Himalaya and
central Himalaya enhances the species diversity and
consequently the viewing prospects. Rajaji's checklist has
about 400 birds species and includes good birds like Greater Scaup,
White-naped Woodpecker, Great Hornbill, Black-bellied Tern,
Pallas's Fish Eagle, Northern Goshawk, Black-necked Stork,
Yellow-billed Blue Magpie, Scaly Thrush, Snowy-browed
Flycatcher, Rusty-flanked Treecreeper, Pale-footed Bush
Warbler, Tytler's Leaf Warbler, Green Avadavat and Reed
Bunting.
Birding
in Rajaji can be: i) around the various forest rest houses,
ii) on the 26 Km forest drive at Chilla across grassland and
mixed forests, iii) along the Phanduwala - Kansrao -
Motichur trail. This 40 km trail goes through undisturbed
stretches of dense forest. The Suswa river runs parallel to
these three connecting forest ranges and marks the northern
boundary of the park. A jungle road connects these ranges
from Asarori to Motichur via Phanduwala and Kansrao.
Approaches to this route can be from the Asarori gate
opposite Karvapani gate on the SH-DD highway from where
Phanduwala is about 10 km. An alternative route is from
Ramgarh gate near Clemet Town. This road goes through the
Mathurawala swamps along Suswa river to reach Phanduwala.
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