The Western Tragopan are found in India, Uttarakhand, north Pakistan and the Western Himalayas.
A Western tragopan can fly and even Western tragopan chicks can actually fly immediately as they are born with flight feathers.
Western Tragopan are endangered because of degradation and fragmentation of their habitat that is caused by livestock grazing, land development and deforestation.
Also illegal hunting of the Western Tragopan for their meat and colorful plumage is also why the Western Tragopan is endangered.
Tragopans are not extinct although tragopans are vulnerable and threatened.
The Temminck's tragopan is not threatened.
The Blyth's tragopan is slightly threatened and the population is estimated to be between 2,500 to 9,999 of them.
The Cabot's tragopan is vulnerable and faces a high risk of becoming extinct in the wild and the main threats to the Cabot tragopan are loss of habitat as well as illegal hunting.
The Western tragopan is a medium sized, brightly plumed pheasant and is highly endangered and globally threatened.
The national bird of Nagaland is the Blyth's tragopan which is an endangered species of pheasant.
Blyth's tragopan is a vulnerable species of galliform and the state bird of Nagaland.
Tragopan means an Asian Pheasant of highland forests, and the male of which has brightly colored plumage used in courtship.
The part of Nagland that elephants and tragopan Blythe are found include Khonoma (Kohima district), Satoi and Tsuruhu (Zunheboto district), Seyochung (Kiphire district), Thanamir, Fakim and Vongtsuvong (Kiphire district).
The parts of Nagland that elephants are found include the Bhandari area, particularly in Merapani range along the Assam border.
Nagaland's elephant population is a part of the larger group that ranges on the south bank of Brahmaputra in Assam.
The elephants on the south bank of the Brahmaputra are divided into eastern, central and western populations.
African elephants live in diverse habitats including wetlands, forest, grassland, savanna and desert across 37 countries in southern, eastern, western and central Africa.
The Asian elephant is also found across 13 countries in South, Southeast and East Asia.
The tragopan Blythe habitat is found in dense evergreen montane forests, where it feeds in the undergrowth.
The Western Tragopan (Tragopan melanocephalus) is found in the western Himalayas from Pakistan to Uttarakhand.
The best place to see them is the Great Himalayan Nation Park in Himachal Pradesh.