Keeping up with hope or terror? Case of COP 29 in Baku

It was last year during the COP28 in Dubai when I got to understand the complexities of the whole climate

More than a game: What Janakpur Bolts’ victory means for Madheshi people, for Nepal

On the surface, the Janakpur Bolts’ victory against the Sudurpaschim Royals in the finals of Nepal’s first-ever Nepal Premier League

An open letter to the king of Bhutan

His Majesty the King of Bhutan  Tashichho Dzong, Thimphu Your Majesty, On the auspicious occasion of the 117th National Day

Turmoil in Syria: Can Nepal offer any lesson?

Sudden, unexpected events at international levels can change your plans. This is what happened to me when I was preparing

International Volunteer Day| What Nepal can do to promote volunteerism

Today is the International Volunteer Day. It should be a big celebration but unfortunately this whole week and the next

Black panther spotted in Rara

Photo: PARINYA PADUNGTIN/Panthera.org

Mugu: A black panther and squirrel have been found for the first time in Rara National Park.

The images of these animals’ presence in the park were seen in the cameras installed inside the park area by zoology students of Tribhuvan University.

The students are studying mammals inhabiting the national park. Rara National Park’s officiating senior conservation officer Mahesh Neupane said the cameras have trapped the images mammals like the Black Panther, the Himalayan bear, fox, musk deer, wild boar and squirrel, among other animals. Of these animals, the black panther and squirrel have been sighted for the first time.

According to Neupane, the camera-trap technology has been used for studying the big and medium-sized mammals found in the park, their activities and details.

Tribhuvan University’s PhD student Tilak Thapa Magar and researchers Bimal Raj Shrestha, Master level student Bachan Prasain and former president of the Park Buffer Zone Consumers Committee Birkha Bahadur Rokaya are involved in the research.

The camera were installed at 40 various locations inside the Park for 21 days from October 22, with permission from the Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation, and the Rara National Park.

Although the Rara National Park office has been conducting bird census inside the park, it has not so far carried out census of the wildlife, aquatic animals and plants.