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Fauna · Vikramshila Gangetic Dolphin Sanctuary, Bihar, India

Ganges River Dolphin — Bihar India

The Ganges river dolphin (Platanista gangetica) — India's national aquatic animal, functionally blind (the eyes reduced to light-sensing organs in the silty Ganges), navigating entirely by echolocation — inhabits the Vikramshila Gangetic Dolphin Sanctuary in Bihar, the most concentrated and best-protected population in the river system. The dolphin's distinctive behaviour — surfacing with the rostrum first at a steep angle, the long narrow beak visible above the surface for 2–3 seconds before the dive — is visible from boats on the sanctuary's 60-kilometre stretch from Sultanganj to Kahalgaon. The Ganges dolphin's near-extinction (fewer than 2,500 remaining) and the sanctuary's conservation significance (the only protected area specifically for the species in India) make each encounter a conservation event as well as a wildlife one, and the Ganges' cultural significance as India's sacred river gives every dolphin sighting a spiritual depth unavailable at any other freshwater dolphin site.

When
Oct — Mar, peak Nov — Feb
Best viewing
A boat-based dawn excursion on the Ganges through a dedicated dolphin sanctuary, watching for the species' distinctive steep-angled surface breaks in silty, slow-moving water. Sightings are likely but brief, demanding patience and attentive scanning.
Category
Fauna
Status
Returns Jan 2027

About this spectacle

Standing in a flat-bottomed boat on the murky Ganges at dawn, you scan the river's surface for the unmistakable signature of the Ganges river dolphin: a rostrum breaking the water at a steep angle, the long narrow beak held aloft for two to three seconds before slipping back under. There is no spectacular leap, no playful bow-riding — just that brief, urgent emergence and then stillness. The sanctuary's 60-kilometre corridor between Sultanganj and Kahalgaon is the single most concentrated population of this functionally blind cetacean anywhere on Earth, navigating entirely by echolocation through opaque, silt-laden water. The river here is wide and brown, the banks fringed with agricultural land and occasional sandbanks. Sightings reward patience: early morning light is soft, the river traffic minimal, and when a dolphin surfaces close to the boat, the audible exhale and the glistening grey skin feel genuinely extraordinary given fewer than 2,500 of this species remain alive.

When to go

Oct — Mar, peak Nov — Feb

Getting there

Nearest airport: GAY. Nearest city: Bhagalpur.

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