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Plant
and Animal Life of Bangladesh
With the exception of the Chittagong Hill
Tracts District, portions of the Madhupur
Tract, and the Sundarbans (a great tidal
mangrove swamp in the southwestern corner
of the country), few extensive forests
remain in Bangladesh, the forested and
wooded area amounting to about one-eighth
of the total area. Broadleaf evergreen
species characterize the hilly regions,
and deciduous trees, such as acacia and
banyan, are common in the drier plains
areas. Commercially valuable trees in
Bangladesh include sundari (hence the
name Sundarbans), gewa, sal (mainly growing
in the Madhupur Tract), and garyan (in
the Chittagong Hill Tracts District).
Village groves abound in fruit trees (mango
and jackfruit, for instance) and date
and areca (betel) palms. The country also
has many varieties of bamboo.
Bangladesh is rich in fauna, including
109 indigenous species of mammals, 684
types of birds, 119 kinds of reptiles,
19 different amphibians, and 200 varieties
of marine and freshwater fish. The rhesus
monkey is common, and gibbons and lemurs
are also found. The Sundarbans area is
one of the principal remaining domains
of the Bengal tiger, and herds of elephants
and many leopards inhabit the Chittagong
Hill Tracts District. Other animals living
in Bangladesh include mongoose, jackal,
Bengal fox, wild boar, parakeet, kingfisher,
vulture, and swamp crocodile.
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