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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper describes the incredible ecological complexity that makes up this park. Suggestions are made for preserving that complexity for future generations. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PP682192.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
listed below. Citation styles constantly change, and these examples may not contain the most recent updates. Manas National Park Research Compiled for The Paper
Store, Inc. by 11/2010 Please Named after the Manas
River which passes through its center, the Manas National Park was first established as a sanctuary in 1928. Over five decades later, in 1985, the park was declared a World
Heritage Site. Currently the Manas National Park encompasses 52,000 hectares (United Nations Environment Program). Located in Assam India, the park is home to an amazing variety of plants
and animals, many of which face severe threats at the hands of poachers and terrorism. Manas Park is most widely recognized for animals
such as the Asian elephant, tiger, clouded leopards, the Indian rhinoceros, and the Asian buffalo. There are many less prominent animal representatives in the park, however, that are just
as worthy of protection. The pygmy hog, Bengal florican, slow loris, smooth coated otter, hoolock gibbons, capped langur, sloth bears, barking deer, chital, sambar, great hornbill and the Malayan
giant squirrel are just a few examples of the many animals that live there. So too are the Assam roofed turtle, the hispid hare, the golden langur and the
pygmy hog, all of which are currently endangered. All in all there are sixty species of mammals in the park and 460 species of birds. These are joined
by an estimated fifty species of reptiles, and three species of amphibians (United Nations Environment Program). Twenty-two of the mammals in the park are classified as endangered (Indias
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