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  2. Wildlife of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_of_India

    Ostriches were also formerly native to India, but also became extinct during the Late Pleistocene. [9] [10] India is home to several well-known large animals, including the Indian elephant, [11] Indian rhinoceros, [12] and Gaur. [4] India is the only country where the big cats tiger and lion exist in the wild.

  3. Fauna of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fauna_of_India

    The house crow and Indian jungle crow are some crow species in India. Chestnut-bellied sandgrouse is a sandgrouse found in India. There are several species of small mammals in India. These include the Asian house shrew, the northern and greater hog badger, the Chinese ferret-badger, the honey badger, the Indian pangolin, and the Chinese pangolin.

  4. Sri Lankan junglefowl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sri_Lankan_junglefowl

    As with other jungle fowl, Sri Lankan jungle fowl are primarily terrestrial. They spend most of their time foraging for food by scratching the ground for various seeds, fallen fruit, and insects. Females lay two to four eggs in a nest, either on the forest floor in steep hill country or in the abandoned nests of other birds and squirrels. Like ...

  5. Indian peafowl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_peafowl

    The Indian peafowl is a resident breeder in the Indian subcontinent and is found across most of India and Sri Lanka. In India, it is found across the country from the Indus valley in the north-west to Assam in the north-east, and from Himalayas in the north to the southern tip, except for the marshlands of Sunderbans in East India. In India, it ...

  6. Red junglefowl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_junglefowl

    The red junglefowl (Gallus gallus), also known as the Indian red junglefowl (and formerly the bankiva or bankiva-fowl), is a species of tropical, predominantly terrestrial bird in the fowl and pheasant family, Phasianidae, found across much of Southeast and parts of South Asia.

  7. Jungle babbler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jungle_babbler

    The jungle babbler (Argya striata) is a member of the family Leiothrichidae found in the Indian subcontinent.Jungle babblers are gregarious birds that forage in small groups of six to ten birds, a habit that has given them the popular name of "Seven Sisters" in urban Northern India, and (seven brothers) in Bengali, with cognates in other regional languages which also mean "seven brothers".

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  9. Indian jungle crow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Jungle_Crow

    The tail of the Indian jungle crow is rounded and the legs and feet are stout. The base of the nape feathers is dusky. [ 1 ] The Himalayan japonensis (in this sense including western intermedius and eastern tibetosinensis ) has a slightly wedge-shaped tail and a voice is a guttural and grating graak ( intermedius ) or a hoarse kyarrh ...