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Panthers and leopards have been seen in the cameras placed in the national and community forest areas of Banke National Park and Kamdi Corridor.
Movement of tigers and leopards has been seen in 169 cameras installed in about 70 places of the park and 95 cameras installed in the Kamdi corridor.
Mandeep Pangeni, information officer of the park, said that tigers and leopards were seen on the camera installed for about 80 days. Now it has to be extracted and analyzed,' he said.
Pangeni said that the actual data will come out after the analysis work done by the joint technical team of Banke National Park, National Nature Conservation Fund and other organizations within a month.
Shankarprasad Gupta, head of the district forest office, informed that tigers and leopards are being studied by installing cameras at a distance of two kilometers in the community and national forests of the Kamdi corridor. The camera was installed in the corridor a week ago. He said that tigers and leopards are seen moving around on camera and information is also being received about which way they walk.
Forest Chief Gupta said that this will also provide real data on tigers and food species. According to the previous count, there were 25 tigers in Banke National Park. The park was established in 2067 . 34 types of mammals including 11 rare types, 300 types of birds including 50 rare types, 24 reptiles including two rare types, more than 55 types of fish species including 5 rare types, according to the park office.
