The Deosai National Park was established in 1993 to protect the survival of the critically endangered
Himalayan brown bear and its habitat. Having long been a prize kill for poachers and hunters, the bear now has a hope for survival in Deosai where its number has increased from only 19 in 1993, to 40 in 2005, and 78 in 2022. In 1993, after playing an instrumental role in the designation of Deosai as a National Park, the
Himalayan Wildlife Foundation (formerly the Himalayan Wildlife Project) was founded with a substantial international financial support. The Himalayan Wildlife Foundation ran two park entry check posts and a field research camp in Deosai for approximately ten years. Documentation was completed by the Himalayan Wildlife Foundation for the handover of the management of the Park to the, then, Northern Areas Forest Department with the department starting to manage the park since 2006. While pressures that existed in the 1990s, such as hunting and
poaching have subsided, the brown bear is still under threat due to pressures such as
climate change, and nutritional deficiencies in bears. The plains are recognised under
IUCN protected area category Ib as wilderness area.
Saussurea lappa (kuth),
Ephedra gerardiana (Say),
Viola pilosa (Skora-mindoq),
Pleurospermum candollei (Shamdun) and
Artemisia brevifolia (Bursay) etc. which are used as traditional drug therapies. ==Cultural references==