They are powerful nocturnal hunters that travel many miles to find buffalo, deer, wild pigs, and other large mammals.
Chital, Sambar and langur species constitute most of the diet of the Indian Leopard, but they are also known to prey on Spotted Deer, cattle, hare, dog and porcupine.
Sloth bears breed during spring and early summer and give birth near the beginning of winter. They feed on termites, honeybee colonies, and fruits.
Hyenas in India inhabit a diversity of habitats, from dry open scrub to deciduous forests and agriculture fields. Although they can hunt down prey.
Elephants are the largest terrestrial mammals. An Asian elephant bull can attain a height of 11 feet and a weight of over six tonnes.
The Southern red muntjac is also called "barking deer" due to the bark-like sound that it makes as an alarm when danger is present.
The spotted deer, or chital, is the most common deer species in Indian forests. The deer's golden-rufus coloring is speckled with white spots.
Wild boar are built like domestic pigs, with bulky, thick-set bodies, long, mobile, cartilaginous snouts, black hooves, and medium-length tails.
Monitor lizards are known for their large claws, powerful tails, long necks, and well-developed legs.
The sambar live in forests, alone or in small groups. A large, relatively long-tailed deer, it stands 1.2–1.4 m (47–55 inches) at the shoulder.