
Bangladesh in general possesses a luxuriant vegetation, with villages appearing to be buried in groves of 
mango, 
jackfruit, 
bamboo, betel nut, coconut, and 
date palm. However, only a small portion of the country’s land surface is covered with forests.
 

Bangladesh has four different areas of vegetation. The eastern zone, consisting of parts of the 
Sylhet and 
Chittagong areas, has many 
lowhills covered with jungles of bamboo and rattan (a species of climbing palm). The most common plant is a large type of bamboo that forms the basis of the country’s paper industry. The central zone, covering parts of the country to the north of 
Dhaka, contains many lakes and supports swampy vegetation; the soil of part of this zone produces the Madhupur jungles. The area lying to the northwest of the 
Jamuna and to the southwest of the Padma forms a flat plain, the vegetation of which consists mostly of 
cultivated plants and orchards. Babul (
Acacia arabica) is the most 
conspicuous tree. The southern zone along the 
Bay of Bengal contains the vast wetlands of the 
Sundarbans, with their distinctive 
mangrove vegetation. Several of the mangrove species are commercially valuable, including the 
sundari (
Heritiera fomes or 
H. minor), for which the Sundarbans are named, and the 
goran (
Ceriops roxburghiana). Also valuable are the 
gewa or 
gengwa (
Excoecaria agallocha) trees, which yield a softwood used for making newsprint. Among the astounding variety of flowers are water lilies (locally called 
shapla, the country’s national flower), marigolds, tuberoses, and Chinese hibiscus. The 
bokul(
Mimusops elengi) is a common shrub that produces small red berries.
 

Bangladesh has an abundance of wildlife, including more than 100 species of mammals, although the 
population of some species has diminished significantly since the early 20th century. Elephants, living in herds of fewer than a dozen to nearly 100, are found in the Chittagong Hill Tracts and in the northeastern Sylhet region. Domesticated 
water buffaloes (
Bubalis bubalis) are used for plowing and pulling carts. Of the different kinds of deer, the small 
muntjac(genus 
Muntiacus; also called barking deer) and the large 
sambardeer (
Cervus unicolor), with its maned neck, are well known. The samba lives in the eastern jungles of the country. The medium-sized 
spotted deer (
C. axis) was once common in many parts of the country but by the early 21st century had become limited to the Sundarbans region. The 
barasingha (
C. duvauceli) also once inhabited the Sundarbans but became extinct in Bangladesh in the 20th century. Similarly, the hog deer (
Axis procinus) has disappeared from the country.Of the carnivores, the royal 
Bengal tiger (
Panthera tigris tigris) is the best known. The common leopard (
P. pardus) is native to the region, as is its smaller relative, the rare 
clouded leopard (
Neofelis nebulosa), with its dark gray oblong-spotted fur. The ferocious 
leopard cat (
Felis bengalensis) is about the size of the 
domestic cat but with longer legs.
 

Bears in Bangladesh include the 
sloth bear (
Melursus ursinus), 
Asiatic black bear (
Ursus thibetanus; also called Himalayan black bear), and 
sun bear (
U. malayanus). The sloth bear is the most common. 
Jackals(
Canis aureis), whose eerie howling at night is a familiar sound in Bangladesh, are abundant, as are various species of 
mongooses. The Bengal, or 
rhesus, monkey (
Macaca mulatta) is about the most common primate in the country.Bangladesh is inhabited by hundreds of species of birds. Common house crows are found everywhere, and their cries are detested by many people of Bangladesh, who regard crows as a bad omen. 
Bulbuls, 
magpie-robins, and a wide variety of warblers are also found; some are migrants that appear only in winter. Several kinds of flycatchers occur, and there are 
mynah birds of several kinds. Other species of birds include various game birds, parakeets, cuckoos, hawks, owls, kingfishers, hornbills, hoopoes, woodpeckers, and vultures. Among the eagles, the crested serpent eagle and the ring-tailed 
fishing eagle are the most common. There also are an array of water birds, including herons, storks, ducks, and wild geese.

 
 
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