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The Biligiriranga Hills, also called B
R Hills, is a hill range situated in south-eastern Karnataka, at its
border with Tamil Nadu in South India. The area is called Biligiriranga
Swamy Temple Wildlife Sanctuary or simply BRT Wildlife Sanctuary. It is
a protected reserve under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1973. Being at
the confluence of the Western Ghats and the Eastern Ghats, the sanctuary
is home to eco-systems that are unique to both the mountain ranges. This
makes it a very critical habitat.
It is picturesquely situated between the Cauvery and the Tungabhadra
rivers.
The Biligiris are charnockitic hills, covered with tropical dry
broadleaf forest, part of the South Deccan Plateau dry deciduous forests
ecoregion. The forests range from scrub forests at lower elevations,
degraded by over-use, to the tall deciduous forests typical of the
ecoregion, to stunted shola forests and montane grasslands at the
highest elevations, which exceed 1800 meters. The forests form an
important wildlife corridor between the Western Ghats and the Eastern
Ghats, linking the largest populations of Asian Elephants and tigers in
southern India. The most conspicuous mammals are the herds of wild
elephants. The BR hills is the only forest east of the main Western
ghats mountain ranges in the central southern peninsula to harbour these
panchyderms in large numbers. The forests were the study area for R.
Sukumar, a scientist who studied the elephants of the area in the early
eighties. A recent survey has revealed the presence of 17 Tigers in this
sanctuary.
The BR hills has been a good place for viewing large game and at the
same time encountering numerous smaller life forms. The forests have
been famous for the Gaur, a large Asian bovid. There are about 26
species of mammals recorded in the sanctuary.
The other mammals include sambhar, chital, the shy barking deerwhich are
quite common here and the rare four-horned antelope. Carnivores include
tigers, leopards, wild dogs, lesser cats and sloth bears and among
arboreal mammals two species of primates and three species of squirrels
including the giant flying squirrel are recorded. A recent (2005) survey
of tigers by DNA analysis of scat samples has revealed 17 tigers,
although the number may be more. 254 species of birds recorded in the BR
hills. These include the enigmatic southern population of the
White-winged Tit (Parus nuchalis), a specimen of which was collected by
R. C. Morris and now housed in the Natural History museum at Tring.
A recently discovered species includes a microhylid frog Microhyla
sholigari, named after the Soligas, an indigenous tribe that inhabit
these hills

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