The ecoregion is habitat for a huge number of
mammalian and
bird species. Notable are the large numbers of the endangered
greater one-horned rhinoceros and
Bengal tigers as well as
Asian elephants,
sloth bears,
Indian leopards. In Nepal's
Chitwan National Park, more than 400 rhinos were sighted in 2008, and 125 adult tigers were recorded during a survey conducted from December 2009 to March 2010, which covered an area of . Nepal's
Bardia National Park and
Shuklaphanta National Park, and India's
Valmiki and
Dudhwa National Parks are home to nearly 100 tigers. Chitwan along with the adjoining
Parsa National Park is of major importance, especially for tigers and
clouded leopard. Grazing animals of the grasslands include five species of deer,
barasingha,
sambar,
chital,
hog deer and
muntjac along with four large grazing animals, Asian elephant, rhinoceros,
gaur and
nilgai. Endangered mammals found here include the
wild water buffalo and the near-endemic
hispid hare (
Caprolagus hispidus). The grasslands are also home to a number of reptiles including the
gharial,
mugger crocodile and
soft-shelled turtles. The grasslands partly cover two
BirdLife International Endemic Bird Areas, the
Central Himalayas EBA in western Nepal and the western end of the
Assam Plains EBA south of Bhutan. There are three near-endemic bird species. The 44 threatened and declining bird species of the grasslands include the
Bengal florican (
Houbaropsis bengalensis),
lesser florican (
Sypheotides indica),
sarus crane (
Grus antigone) and the elusive Indian grassbird. ==Threats and conservation==