About the Red Panda
The red panda — also called the Firefox, from which Mozilla's browser takes its name — is one of the most enchanting mammals in India, a rust-red arboreal creature with a striped bushy tail, a raccoon-like masked face, and enormous forward-facing ears. Despite superficial similarities to both raccoons and giant pandas, the red panda represents its own unique evolutionary lineage with no close relatives. India is one of the most important countries for red panda conservation, with the eastern Himalayas of Sikkim, West Bengal, Arunachal Pradesh, and Meghalaya sheltering a significant portion of the global population.
Red pandas are primarily bamboo specialists — though unlike giant pandas, they eat leaves rather than shoots and supplement their diet with fruits, eggs, and insects. They are solitary and largely crepuscular, most active at dawn and dusk, spending midday curled on a tree branch with their bushy tail wrapped around them for warmth. Singalila and Neora Valley in West Bengal, and Barsey Rhododendron Sanctuary in Sikkim, offer the best opportunities for red panda sightings in India, particularly in the bamboo-rich forest zones between 2400 and 3800 metres.
- Visit Singalila NP or Neora Valley NP in West Bengal during October–November or February–April for the best sighting opportunities in bamboo forest zones.
- Red pandas are most active at dawn and dusk. Look for the characteristic red-brown shape curled on a horizontal tree branch or moving through bamboo stands.
- Barsey Rhododendron Sanctuary and Khangchendzonga NP in Sikkim also have red panda populations in magnificent Himalayan scenery.