Most visitors don’t consider the Himalaya a wildlife destination, but the world’s highest mountains hold a surprising amount of diversity. From snow leopards and grumpy Pallas’s cats to blood ...
Climate change impact on wildlife in Asia is escalating, leading to habitat loss, human-wildlife conflicts, and endangering ...
With as few as 4,000 snow leopards left in the wild, the survival of these elusive cats has become a high-stakes test of ...
Pallas's cat was photographed in Arunachal Pradesh, expanding its range, while WWF-India recorded rare wild cats at record altitudes.
The world's smallest deer, a flying frog and catfish that stick to rocks -- as well as more than 350 other species -- have been discovered over the past 10 years in the Himalayas, making them one of ...
Residents across Belfast are voicing concern over the rampant spread of Himalayan balsam, an invasive plant threatening ...
Himachal Pradesh, with 44 unique adults detected in six representative sites First official record of Pallas’s cat in Kinnaur and rediscovery of woolly flying ...
Spanning India, Nepal, Bhutan, Tibet, and Pakistan, the region is home to some of the most elusive and majestic wildlife ...
Wildlife Week 2025 was commemorated across various districts of Nagaland with a series of awareness programmes, nature walks, ...
Altaf Ali Shah, a wildlife department official in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, said torrential rains and glacial ...
Hydropower infrastructure may bring economic and geopolitical advantages, but India risks undermining the mountains that protect its people, wildlife and borders.