751
species of plants
360
species of birds
71
species of mammals
5600
people reside inside the park
Residents are mostly farmers dependent on agriculture and livestock farming
Non-wood forest products such as mushrooms and herbal plants support the park residents in income-generation
Briddungla (110 lakes).
Chungphel-Buli Trek (6 days trek) where trekkers can experience Fir forests and the habitat of the tiger.
Rodhungla Tang-Ungar-Gorgan Trek (5 days trek) where trekkers can experience ruins of stone houses reminiscent of ancient Bhutan and habitats of the Tiger and terrestrial birds
With many development activities, such as construction of roads communication infrastructures, and power lines, being carried out, the park has lost substantial amount of extensive pristine land areas over the past decades and furthermore have contributed to the ecological disturbances
The park has experienced numerous flash floods.
Park residents also report observing a reduction in the frequency and volume of snowfall in recent years.
Degraded lands within PNP mapped and restored with climate-smart mechanisms
PNP equipped with adequate and competent staff as well as essential equipment and infrastructure
Conservation status of other high-profile, lesser known, endangered and endemic flora and fauna species determined
Increased tiger population
High-biodiversity habitats, degraded forests, and climate refugia designated
An innovative Human-wildlife Conflict mitigation mechanism implemented in JSWNP
Forest quality and extent is maintained
New nature-based local enterprises implemented