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Kalesar National Park

Kalesar National Park (13,000 acres (53 km2)) and adjacent Kalesar Wildlife Sanctuary (13,209 acres (53.45 km2) are protected areas in Yamunanagar district of Haryana state in India, 122 kilometres (76 mi) from Chandigarh.[1] Kalesar National Park was established in 2003. Kalesar National Park and Kalesar Wildlife Sanctuary are contiguous to Simbalbara National Park in Himachal Pradesh and Rajaji National Park in Uttarakhand. Kalesar is a popular destination for leopards, panthers, elephants, red jungle fowl and bird-watching.[2][3] This forested area in the Shivalik foothills is covered primarily with sal with smattering of Semul, Amaltas and Bahera trees as well.[2][4] Wildlife jeep safaris are available on 3 tracks.[5] Park is closed July to September and during the remaining months visiting hours are 6 am to 10 am and 4 pm to 7 pm during summers, and 7 am to 11 am and 3.30 pm to 6 pm during winters.[5]

Kalesar National Park
Park
Kalesar National Park
Location in Haryana, India
Kalesar National Park
Kalesar National Park (India)
Coordinates: 30°22′N 77°32′E / 30.367°N 77.533°E / 30.367; 77.533Coordinates: 30°22′N 77°32′E / 30.367°N 77.533°E / 30.367; 77.533
Country India
StateHaryana
DistrictYamunanagar district
Government
 • TypeGovernment of Haryana
 • BodyForests Department, Haryana
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
Websitewww.haryanaforest.gov.in
Indian leopard is found at Kalesar
Asiatic elephant is found at Kalesar

History

Kalesar National Park spread across 13,000 acres (53 km2) was notified on 8 December 2003 and adjacent 13,209 acres (53.45 km2) Kalesar Wildlife Sanctuary was notified on 13 December 1996.[5][6] However, it is alleged, absence of sufficient funds from the Centre is proving to be a hindrance in wildlife conservation in the national park.

Etymology

Kalesar National Park is named after the Kalesar Mahadev temple located in this national park.[2]

18th and 19th Century

Afghan invader Ahmad Shah Abdali camped at Pinjore Gardens in 1765 and British Raj soldier Rollo Gillespie camped in these hills in 1807 for tiger hunting in these hills. By 1892-93, the count of tigers and panthers had dwindled due to excessive hunting. Consequently, by 1913 Sirmur State had banned the hunting.[7]

Kalesar Mahadev temple

The ancient Kalesar Mahadev temple takes its name from the a corrupted form of Kaleshwar, a moniker of Hindu deity lord Shiva. It is located near NH 907 on the east side and just 400 meter north of Kalesar Dak baglow (rest house) and 8.5 km north of Hathni Kund Barrage. There is also another later era Shiva temple north of Kalesar Mahadev temple.

As part of INR1200 crore Morni to Kalesar tourism development plan announced in January 2019, Government of Haryana is developing this temple, along with Kapal Mochan Tirth, Panchmukhi Hanuman temple of Basatiyawala, Sharda Mata Temple of Chotta Trilokpur and Lohgarh fort capital of Banda Singh Bahadur.[8]

Colonial Dak Bungalow

This area, excellent for the bird watchers and wildlife enthusiasts, has a 100-year-old colonial dak bungalow.[2] It is located near NH 907 on the east side and just 400 meter south of Kalesar Mahadev temple and 8.1 km north of Hathni Kund Barrage. The forest rest house is at a picturesque point and commands a sweeping view of the Yamuna river. Surrounded with multi-layered gardens, and as typical of the Raj bungalow architecture, there are high-ceiling rooms, exquisite parquet flooring and teak paneling along walls. A fireplace with a mantelpiece above and antique furniture completes the period setting.

Geography

The Kalesar national park and wildlife sanctuary are located on both sides of Yamuna Nagar-Paonta Sahib Road in Yamuna Nagar district in Haryana, about 8 km from Hathni Kund Barrage, 15 km from Paonta sahib,[5] 55 km from Dehradun,[5] 43 km from Yamunanagar, 119 km via bitumen-paved Bilaspur road through forest or 122 km via NH 7 from Chandigarh. It is bounded by Yamuna river to the east, Rajaji National Park in Uttrakhand to the northeast, Simbalbara National Park in main Shivalik Hill range to the north on Haryana's border with Himachal Pradesh, Morni Hills and agrarian farms to the west, and agrarian farms in planes of Yamunanagar district to the south.[5]

Wildlife Safaris

Jeep safaris are available on the following 3 motorable tracks only during the designated park opening months and hours: 20 feet wide route-1 of 7 km, 60 feet wide route-2 of 6.5 km and 60 feet wide route-3 of 6 km.[5] Private vehicles are not allowed on these routes, except only those pre-registered with the wildlife department for the purpose of operating safaris.[5] Park is closed July to September and during the remaining months visiting hours are 6 am to 10 am and 4 pm to 7 pm during summers, and 7 am to 11 am and 3.30 pm to 6 pm during winters.[5]

Shivalik foothills

The foothills of Shivalik Hills range, where this park lies, runs parallel with the Himalayan range from Haridwar on the Ganges to the banks of the Beas, with a length of 200 miles (320 km) and an average width of 10 miles (16 km). The intermediate valley lying between the outer hills and the Mussoorie. The elevation varies from 2000 to 3,500 ft (1,100 m). Geologically speaking the Shivaliks belong to the tertiary deposits of the outer Himalayas and are chiefly composed of low sandstone and conglomerate hills, the solidified and upheaved detritus of the great range in their rear. There are a number of pebbled dry rivulets, which come alive during the monsoon season. A dirt road diverts from the highway where a faded billboard announces entry into the reserve forest mainly consisting of Sal trees.[2]

Flora

Dense old forest

Kalesar has 53% dense forest, 38% open forest, 9% scrub. Total forest cover is about 71%. Spread over an area of 11,570 acres (46.8  km2), Kalesar reserve forest is the only one of its kind in Haryana. Besides the tall, leafy sal trees that constitute the dense age-old forest belt of the Doon valley, there are other trees like Semul, Amaltas and Bahera.[2] khair, shisham, sain, jhingan, chhal (Anogeissus latifolia) also found in the forest. It is the only forest in Haryana with a natural Sal tree belt. Among the flora is the small sindoor tree — it has dainty flowers, which turn into pods to produce the vermilion sindoor that adorns the tresses of married women. Climbers snake up the tree stems, and the forest floor is littered with fallen leaves and foliage plants. Sculptural anthills dot the landscape. There is a long stretch of man-made forest clearing and a 'fire line' which helps in containing forest fires.

Medicinal plants

In the jungle, there is a machaan (high observation tower) with a dangerous-looking service ladder. From top the effort is rewarded by a sweeping panorama of the 11000 acres (45 km2) of the great sal forest; criss-crossed by fire lines and meandering rivulets. About 20 km away on the Chuharpur road, is the Ch. Devi Lal Herbal Nature Park, a project of the Forests Department, Haryana. The park, spread over 50 acres (200,000 m2) with 61,000 shrubs of herbs and 6100 medicinal tree plants.

Fauna

Wild animals

Khol Hi-Raitan Wildlife Sanctuary and Bir Shikargah Wildlife Sanctuary are only 3 km aerial distance from each other, both are also only few km away from Kalesar National Park, all of which lie in the Shivalik hills of Haryana. All these three sanctuaries have similar species of wild animal that migrate from one sanctuary to another.[9]

In 2016, survey recorded Indian leopard, leopard cat, rusty-spotted cat, jungle cat, Indian jackal, Asiatic elephant, chital, sambar, barking deer, goral, nilgai, Indian crested porcupine, small Indian civet, common palm civet, gray langur, rhesus macaque, Indian gray mongoose, boar and Indian hare.[3][10]

Earlier May 2004 survey in collaboration with Wildlife Institute of India found wild boars, sambhars, hares, red junglefowl, porcupine, monkeys, chitals etc.

Leopard

In 2016, the annual two-month animal counting survey done by the Wildlife Institute of India using installed camera, found 19 species of mammalians including 42 Indian leopards.[3][10], up from 19 in 1989 report (reported then as panthers).[2]

Elephants

Kalesar Wildlife Sanctuary has natural population of the wild elephants. It is also home to the Ch. Surinder Singh Elephant Rehabilitation Centre (ERC) at Ban Santoor, which is a sanctuary to rehabilitate the rescued abused, exploited and sick elephants.[11][12] It was set up by the Haryana Forests department in association with an NGO called Wildlife SOS, with the help of Government of India grant under the Project Elephant. ERC has elephant shelters, veterinary services, elephant husbandry and fodder service, elephant walking and exercise trails, etc.[12] In 2015, it had 3 rescued female elephants, namely Erica, Ella and Lilly.[11] Wild elephants also roam Kalesar and adjoining Rajaji National Park and Tiger Reserve spread across Uttrakhand and Himachal Pradesh. In January 2018, Delhi Forests department planned to rescue all the 7 domesticated elephants of Delhi kept in captivity, 2 of which will be sent to Kalesar Wildlife Sanctuary in Haryana and 4 will be sent to Rajaji National Park and Tiger Reserve in Uttrakhand.[13]

Wildlife preservation

Eight watering holes have been dug up across the forest area to ensure that the wildlife does not stray into human habitats on its fringes in search of drinking water. Earthen dams have also been constructed to conserve rainwater for use of wildlife. Apart from this, there is proposal of Construction of 8 dams within this sanctuary area which is at the stage of Forest and wildlife clearances which is being taken care by Er. Navneet Kumar from Gaya Bihar working in Haryana Irrigation Department.

There is a plan to build a fence around the area.

Wildlife protection force and courts

As for the steps taken to ensure protection of wildlife and environment, the forest staff have been given weapons by the state government to tackle the menace posed by poachers. The state had also set up two special environmental courts in Kurukshetra and Faridabad to deal with crimes related to poaching and illicit felling of trees from the area.

Monitoring and census cameras

The Forests Department, Haryana, with funding provided by the Wildlife Institute of India, installed 80 cameras at 40 locations across the park in December 2014, primarily to monitor the movements of tigers, leopards and other animals in the park, as well as to conduct annual two-month long animal species and animal count survey.[3][6]

Gallery

References

See also

Citations

  1. ^ "Kalesar National Park". Haryana Forest Department. Retrieved 8 August 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g BriefReportonBio-diversity, Forests Clearance, 1989.
  3. ^ a b c d 2 Leopard spotted in Kalesar National park, Published 16 June 2016
  4. ^ Kalesar forest under miners' attack
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kalesar National Park 8 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Haryana Forests.
  6. ^ a b Bhardwaj, Bipin (5 December 2014). "Wildlife Department installs 80 camera traps for animal census". The Tribune. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  7. ^ District Gazetteer of Ambala, 1892-93.
  8. ^ Kalesar-Kalka stretch to be promoted for tourism, The Tribune, 18 jan 2019.
  9. ^ Government of India's Ministry of Environment and Forests clearance, published: 2013
  10. ^ a b 42 leopards spotted in Kalesar National Park, Haryana, India Today, 2016.
  11. ^ a b Ch. Surinder Singh Elephant Rehabilitation Centre (ERC), Wildlife SOS, 2015.
  12. ^ a b Elephant rescue facilities, Wild SOS.
  13. ^ In Delhi’s ‘jumbo loss’, major gain for Uttarakhand tiger reserve, Hindustan Times, 31 January 2018.

kalesar, national, park, acres, adjacent, kalesar, wildlife, sanctuary, acres, protected, areas, yamunanagar, district, haryana, state, india, kilometres, from, chandigarh, established, 2003, kalesar, wildlife, sanctuary, contiguous, simbalbara, national, park. Kalesar National Park 13 000 acres 53 km2 and adjacent Kalesar Wildlife Sanctuary 13 209 acres 53 45 km2 are protected areas in Yamunanagar district of Haryana state in India 122 kilometres 76 mi from Chandigarh 1 Kalesar National Park was established in 2003 Kalesar National Park and Kalesar Wildlife Sanctuary are contiguous to Simbalbara National Park in Himachal Pradesh and Rajaji National Park in Uttarakhand Kalesar is a popular destination for leopards panthers elephants red jungle fowl and bird watching 2 3 This forested area in the Shivalik foothills is covered primarily with sal with smattering of Semul Amaltas and Bahera trees as well 2 4 Wildlife jeep safaris are available on 3 tracks 5 Park is closed July to September and during the remaining months visiting hours are 6 am to 10 am and 4 pm to 7 pm during summers and 7 am to 11 am and 3 30 pm to 6 pm during winters 5 Kalesar National ParkParkKalesar National ParkLocation in Haryana IndiaShow map of HaryanaKalesar National ParkKalesar National Park India Show map of IndiaCoordinates 30 22 N 77 32 E 30 367 N 77 533 E 30 367 77 533 Coordinates 30 22 N 77 32 E 30 367 N 77 533 E 30 367 77 533Country IndiaStateHaryanaDistrictYamunanagar districtGovernment TypeGovernment of Haryana BodyForests Department HaryanaTime zoneUTC 5 30 IST Websitewww wbr haryanaforest wbr gov wbr inIndian leopard is found at Kalesar Asiatic elephant is found at Kalesar Contents 1 History 1 1 Etymology 1 2 18th and 19th Century 1 3 Kalesar Mahadev temple 1 4 Colonial Dak Bungalow 2 Geography 2 1 Wildlife Safaris 2 2 Shivalik foothills 3 Flora 3 1 Dense old forest 3 2 Medicinal plants 4 Fauna 4 1 Wild animals 4 1 1 Leopard 4 1 2 Elephants 4 2 Wildlife preservation 4 2 1 Wildlife protection force and courts 4 2 2 Monitoring and census cameras 5 Gallery 6 References 6 1 See also 6 2 CitationsHistory EditKalesar National Park spread across 13 000 acres 53 km2 was notified on 8 December 2003 and adjacent 13 209 acres 53 45 km2 Kalesar Wildlife Sanctuary was notified on 13 December 1996 5 6 However it is alleged absence of sufficient funds from the Centre is proving to be a hindrance in wildlife conservation in the national park Etymology Edit Kalesar National Park is named after the Kalesar Mahadev temple located in this national park 2 18th and 19th Century Edit Afghan invader Ahmad Shah Abdali camped at Pinjore Gardens in 1765 and British Raj soldier Rollo Gillespie camped in these hills in 1807 for tiger hunting in these hills By 1892 93 the count of tigers and panthers had dwindled due to excessive hunting Consequently by 1913 Sirmur State had banned the hunting 7 Kalesar Mahadev temple Edit The ancient Kalesar Mahadev temple takes its name from the a corrupted form of Kaleshwar a moniker of Hindu deity lord Shiva It is located near NH 907 on the east side and just 400 meter north of Kalesar Dak baglow rest house and 8 5 km north of Hathni Kund Barrage There is also another later era Shiva temple north of Kalesar Mahadev temple As part of INR1200 crore Morni to Kalesar tourism development plan announced in January 2019 Government of Haryana is developing this temple along with Kapal Mochan Tirth Panchmukhi Hanuman temple of Basatiyawala Sharda Mata Temple of Chotta Trilokpur and Lohgarh fort capital of Banda Singh Bahadur 8 Colonial Dak Bungalow Edit This area excellent for the bird watchers and wildlife enthusiasts has a 100 year old colonial dak bungalow 2 It is located near NH 907 on the east side and just 400 meter south of Kalesar Mahadev temple and 8 1 km north of Hathni Kund Barrage The forest rest house is at a picturesque point and commands a sweeping view of the Yamuna river Surrounded with multi layered gardens and as typical of the Raj bungalow architecture there are high ceiling rooms exquisite parquet flooring and teak paneling along walls A fireplace with a mantelpiece above and antique furniture completes the period setting Geography EditThe Kalesar national park and wildlife sanctuary are located on both sides of Yamuna Nagar Paonta Sahib Road in Yamuna Nagar district in Haryana about 8 km from Hathni Kund Barrage 15 km from Paonta sahib 5 55 km from Dehradun 5 43 km from Yamunanagar 119 km via bitumen paved Bilaspur road through forest or 122 km via NH 7 from Chandigarh It is bounded by Yamuna river to the east Rajaji National Park in Uttrakhand to the northeast Simbalbara National Park in main Shivalik Hill range to the north on Haryana s border with Himachal Pradesh Morni Hills and agrarian farms to the west and agrarian farms in planes of Yamunanagar district to the south 5 Wildlife Safaris Edit Jeep safaris are available on the following 3 motorable tracks only during the designated park opening months and hours 20 feet wide route 1 of 7 km 60 feet wide route 2 of 6 5 km and 60 feet wide route 3 of 6 km 5 Private vehicles are not allowed on these routes except only those pre registered with the wildlife department for the purpose of operating safaris 5 Park is closed July to September and during the remaining months visiting hours are 6 am to 10 am and 4 pm to 7 pm during summers and 7 am to 11 am and 3 30 pm to 6 pm during winters 5 Shivalik foothills Edit The foothills of Shivalik Hills range where this park lies runs parallel with the Himalayan range from Haridwar on the Ganges to the banks of the Beas with a length of 200 miles 320 km and an average width of 10 miles 16 km The intermediate valley lying between the outer hills and the Mussoorie The elevation varies from 2000 to 3 500 ft 1 100 m Geologically speaking the Shivaliks belong to the tertiary deposits of the outer Himalayas and are chiefly composed of low sandstone and conglomerate hills the solidified and upheaved detritus of the great range in their rear There are a number of pebbled dry rivulets which come alive during the monsoon season A dirt road diverts from the highway where a faded billboard announces entry into the reserve forest mainly consisting of Sal trees 2 Flora EditDense old forest Edit Kalesar has 53 dense forest 38 open forest 9 scrub Total forest cover is about 71 Spread over an area of 11 570 acres 46 8 km2 Kalesar reserve forest is the only one of its kind in Haryana Besides the tall leafy sal trees that constitute the dense age old forest belt of the Doon valley there are other trees like Semul Amaltas and Bahera 2 khair shisham sain jhingan chhal Anogeissus latifolia also found in the forest It is the only forest in Haryana with a natural Sal tree belt Among the flora is the small sindoor tree it has dainty flowers which turn into pods to produce the vermilion sindoor that adorns the tresses of married women Climbers snake up the tree stems and the forest floor is littered with fallen leaves and foliage plants Sculptural anthills dot the landscape There is a long stretch of man made forest clearing and a fire line which helps in containing forest fires Medicinal plants Edit In the jungle there is a machaan high observation tower with a dangerous looking service ladder From top the effort is rewarded by a sweeping panorama of the 11000 acres 45 km2 of the great sal forest criss crossed by fire lines and meandering rivulets About 20 km away on the Chuharpur road is the Ch Devi Lal Herbal Nature Park a project of the Forests Department Haryana The park spread over 50 acres 200 000 m2 with 61 000 shrubs of herbs and 6100 medicinal tree plants Fauna EditWild animals Edit Sambar deer Khol Hi Raitan Wildlife Sanctuary and Bir Shikargah Wildlife Sanctuary are only 3 km aerial distance from each other both are also only few km away from Kalesar National Park all of which lie in the Shivalik hills of Haryana All these three sanctuaries have similar species of wild animal that migrate from one sanctuary to another 9 In 2016 survey recorded Indian leopard leopard cat rusty spotted cat jungle cat Indian jackal Asiatic elephant chital sambar barking deer goral nilgai Indian crested porcupine small Indian civet common palm civet gray langur rhesus macaque Indian gray mongoose boar and Indian hare 3 10 Earlier May 2004 survey in collaboration with Wildlife Institute of India found wild boars sambhars hares red junglefowl porcupine monkeys chitals etc Leopard Edit Further information Leopards of Haryana and Gurugram leopard and deer safari Indian leopard In 2016 the annual two month animal counting survey done by the Wildlife Institute of India using installed camera found 19 species of mammalians including 42 Indian leopards 3 10 up from 19 in 1989 report reported then as panthers 2 Elephants Edit See also Pinjore Jatayu Conservation Breeding Centre and Morni Pheasant Breeding Center Kalesar Wildlife Sanctuary has natural population of the wild elephants It is also home to the Ch Surinder Singh Elephant Rehabilitation Centre ERC at Ban Santoor which is a sanctuary to rehabilitate the rescued abused exploited and sick elephants 11 12 It was set up by the Haryana Forests department in association with an NGO called Wildlife SOS with the help of Government of India grant under the Project Elephant ERC has elephant shelters veterinary services elephant husbandry and fodder service elephant walking and exercise trails etc 12 In 2015 it had 3 rescued female elephants namely Erica Ella and Lilly 11 Wild elephants also roam Kalesar and adjoining Rajaji National Park and Tiger Reserve spread across Uttrakhand and Himachal Pradesh In January 2018 Delhi Forests department planned to rescue all the 7 domesticated elephants of Delhi kept in captivity 2 of which will be sent to Kalesar Wildlife Sanctuary in Haryana and 4 will be sent to Rajaji National Park and Tiger Reserve in Uttrakhand 13 Wildlife preservation Edit Eight watering holes have been dug up across the forest area to ensure that the wildlife does not stray into human habitats on its fringes in search of drinking water Earthen dams have also been constructed to conserve rainwater for use of wildlife Apart from this there is proposal of Construction of 8 dams within this sanctuary area which is at the stage of Forest and wildlife clearances which is being taken care by Er Navneet Kumar from Gaya Bihar working in Haryana Irrigation Department There is a plan to build a fence around the area Wildlife protection force and courts Edit As for the steps taken to ensure protection of wildlife and environment the forest staff have been given weapons by the state government to tackle the menace posed by poachers The state had also set up two special environmental courts in Kurukshetra and Faridabad to deal with crimes related to poaching and illicit felling of trees from the area Monitoring and census cameras Edit The Forests Department Haryana with funding provided by the Wildlife Institute of India installed 80 cameras at 40 locations across the park in December 2014 primarily to monitor the movements of tigers leopards and other animals in the park as well as to conduct annual two month long animal species and animal count survey 3 6 Gallery Edit Indian leopard is found here Elephant Indian hare is found at Kalesar Indian gray mongoose is found at Kalesar Indian crested porcupine is found at Kalesar Wild boar Langur monkey Rhesus macaque Indian robinReferences EditSee also Edit Ch Devi Lal Herbal Nature Park List of National Parks amp Wildlife Sanctuaries of Haryana India List of national parks of India Wildlife sanctuaries of IndiaCitations Edit Kalesar National Park Haryana Forest Department Retrieved 8 August 2014 a b c d e f g BriefReportonBio diversity Forests Clearance 1989 a b c d 2 Leopard spotted in Kalesar National park Published 16 June 2016 Kalesar forest under miners attack a b c d e f g h i Kalesar National Park Archived 8 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine Haryana Forests a b Bhardwaj Bipin 5 December 2014 Wildlife Department installs 80 camera traps for animal census The Tribune Retrieved 10 January 2015 District Gazetteer of Ambala 1892 93 Kalesar Kalka stretch to be promoted for tourism The Tribune 18 jan 2019 Government of India s Ministry of Environment and Forests clearance published 2013 a b 42 leopards spotted in Kalesar National Park Haryana India Today 2016 a b Ch Surinder Singh Elephant Rehabilitation Centre ERC Wildlife SOS 2015 a b Elephant rescue facilities Wild SOS In Delhi s jumbo loss major gain for Uttarakhand tiger reserve Hindustan Times 31 January 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kalesar National Park amp oldid 1146199983, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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