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Flora and fauna of Rajasthan

Wildlife of Rajasthan comprises the flora and fauna of the state of Rajasthan, India. The region ranges from the arid Thar Desert to the ancient Aravalli Range, and important wetlands such as the Keoladeo Ghana National Park. Continuous human habitation since the Indus Valley Civilisation at sites like Kalibangan and Balathal has influenced local ecosystems over millennia.

Geography

Rajasthan is India’s largest state by area. It borders Pakistan to the west and covers:

  • Thar Desert: sand dunes, rocky outcrops, saline depressions; annual rainfall 100–500 mm.
  • Aravalli Range: SW–NE fold mountains rising to ~1 700 m at Mount Abu.
  • Eastern plains and wetlands: alluvial areas in Bharatpur and Dausa districts.
  • Mount Abu: the state’s only hill station with subtropical evergreen forests.

Ecosystems and vegetation types

Thar Desert

Aravalli Hills

  • Lower slopes: tropical thorn and dry deciduous forests (Tectona grandis, Acacia spp.).
  • Mount Abu: subtropical evergreen forests with endemic orchids, bryophytes and freshwater algae.
  • Acts as corridor for wildlife movement and barrier between desert and plains.

Wetlands

  • Keoladeo Ghana National Park (Bharatpur; ~29 km²; UNESCO World Heritage Site): wintering ground for >350 waterfowl species.
  • Sambhar Lake: India’s largest salt lake, important for flamingos and halophytes (Salvadora spp.).

Other forest types

  • Tropical thorn forests: western Rajasthan.
  • Dry deciduous forests: eastern and southern districts.
  • Subtropical evergreen forests: Mount Abu highlands.
  • Bamboo and riverine forests: in moist southeastern Aravallis.

Flora

Regional representative species include:

Thar Desert
* Prosopis cineraria (khejri; state tree)
* Tecomella undulata (rohida; state flower)
* Ziziphus spp., Acacia spp.
* Lasiurus sindicus
Aravalli Range
* Tectona grandis (teak)
* Diverse orchids at Mount Abu
Wetlands
* Nelumbo nucifera (lotus), Nymphaea spp.
* Salvadora oleoides, S. persica
Other forests
* Shorea robusta, Madhuca longifolia, Diospyros melanoxylon
* Bamboo spp.

Fauna

Mammals

Common mammals

Rare mammals

Recently reported mammals

Birds

Over 500 species have been recorded in Rajasthan.

Reptiles and amphibians

Insects and other invertebrates

Insects from >14 orders (Orthoptera, Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Hymenoptera), including desert locusts, butterflies, beetles, bees and ants. Arachnids include scorpions (e.g. Hottentotta tamulus) and spiders.

Protected areas

National parks

Wildlife sanctuaries

Conservation reserves and wetlands

Conservation efforts

Government initiatives

  • Project Tiger: tiger reserves at Ranthambore and Sariska under NTCA.
  • Project Great Indian Bustard: launched 5 June 2013 for captive breeding and habitat protection.

Research and institutions

  • Wildlife Institute of India – research, training
  • Arid Forest Research Institute (AFRI), Jodhpur – dryland forestry research

Challenges

  • Habitat fragmentation: agriculture, urbanization, mining, infrastructure
  • Poaching and illegal wildlife trade
  • Human–wildlife conflict: crop raiding, livestock predation
  • Climate change: altered monsoons, temperature rise, habitat shifts
  • Ecological shifts: Thar “greening” favouring generalists over specialists

See also

References

External links