Pakke Tiger Reserve is in the Pakke Kessang district of Arunachal Pradesh in northeastern India. The 862 km2 (333 sq mi) reserve is protected by the Department of Environment and Forest of Arunachal Pradesh. The area of Pakke Tiger Reserve was initially constituted as Pakhui Reserve Forest on 1 July 1966 and declared a game reserve on 28 March 1977. In 2001, it was renamed Pakhui Wildlife Sanctuary and became Pakhui Tiger Reserve on 23 April 2002 as the 26th Tiger Reserve under Project Tiger of the National Tiger Conservation Authority. Read more about "Pakke Tiger Reserve"
40 mammals, 300 birds, over 1500 vascular plant species, 379 butterfly species, 36 reptiles, 30 amphibian species have been reported in tiger reserve.
More then 40 wild animals (mammals, birds, sankes and pangolins) are rescued and safely released in the tiger reseve.
Forests are vital for all of us, but they are being destroyed in part for products, that we consume for our needs, We work to end deforestation, encourage production that respects the environment, which encourages local communities to sustainable.