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Kishanpur Wildlife Sanctuary

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7-686: The Kishanpur Wildlife Sanctuary is a part of the Dudhwa Tiger Reserve near Mailani in Uttar Pradesh , India . It covers an area of 227 km (88 sq mi) and was founded in 1972. It is 13 km away from Bhira town in Lakhimpur Kheri District. The sanctuary is covered with a dense deciduous forest of sal, teak and jamun. This article about protected areas of India is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Dudhwa Tiger Reserve The Dudhwa Tiger Reserve

14-536: Is a protected area in Uttar Pradesh that stretches mainly across the Lakhimpur Kheri and Bahraich districts and comprises the Dudhwa National Park , Kishanpur Wildlife Sanctuary and Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary . It covers an area of 1,284.3 km (495.9 sq mi). Three large forested areas are extant within the reserve, although most of the surrounding landscape is agricultural. It shares

21-588: The north-eastern boundary with Nepal , which is defined to a large extent by the Mohana River. It ranges in altitude from 110 to 185 m (361 to 607 ft), and several streams flow through the reserve from the northwest across the alluvial plain that encompasses the reserve. The Dudhwa National Park and the Kishanpur Wildlife Sanctuary were designated as Dudhwa Tiger Reserve in 1987 as part of Project Tiger . The Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary

28-549: The population had increased to an estimated 106–118 tigers and was considered stable. In July 1976, Billy Arjan Singh acquired a tiger cub named Tara from Twycross Zoo in the United Kingdom , hand reared her and later reintroduced her to the wild in the Dudhwa National Park with the permission of India's then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi . In the 1990s, some tigers from the protected area were observed to have

35-611: The tigers in question had a Bengal tiger mitochondrial haplotype indicating that their mother was a Bengal tiger. Skin, hair and blood samples from 71 tigers collected in various Indian zoos, in the National Museum in Kolkata and including two samples from Dudhwa National Park were prepared for microsatellite analysis that revealed that two tigers had alleles in two loci contributed by Bengal and Siberian tiger subspecies. However, samples of two hybrid specimens constituted too small

42-498: The typical appearance of Siberian tigers , namely a large head, pale fur, white complexion, and wide stripes, and were suspected to be Bengal-Siberian tiger hybrids . Billy Arjan Singh sent hair samples of tigers from the national park to the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology in Hyderabad where the samples were analysed using mitochondrial sequence analysis. Results revealed that

49-490: Was added in the year 2000. It is one of India's 53 Tiger Reserves . The protected area is home for tigers , leopards , Asiatic black bears , sloth bears , Swamp deer , rhinoceros , elephants , cheetal , hog deer , barking deer , sambar , wild boar and hispid hare . In 2006, the tiger population of the Dudhwa-Kheri- Pilibhit conservation complex was estimated as comprising 80–110 tigers. Until 2010,

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