Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Keoladeo National Park' has mentioned 'National park' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Keoladeo Ghana National ParkIUCN category II (national park)Keoladeo Ghana National Park, Bharatpur, Rajasthan, IndiaLocationBharatpur, Rajasthan, IndiaNearestxc2xa0cityBharatpur, RajasthanCoordinates27xc2xb010xe2x80xb200xe2x80xb3N 77xc2xb031xe2x80xb200xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf27.166667xc2xb0N 77.516667xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 27.166667; 77.516667Coordinates: 27xc2xb010xe2x80xb200xe2x80xb3N 77xc2xb031xe2x80xb200xe2x80xb3Exefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf27.166667xc2xb0N 77.516667xc2xb0Exefxbbxbf / 27.166667; 77.516667Area2,873 hectares (7,100 acres; 11.1xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi; 28.7xc2xa0km2)Established10xc2xa0Marchxc2xa01982xc2xa0(1982-03-10)Visitors100,000 (inxc2xa02008)[1]Governingxc2xa0bodyRajasthan Tourism Development Corporation UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficialxc2xa0nameKeoladeo National ParkCriteriaNatural:xc2xa0(x)Reference340Inscription1985 (9th session) Ramsar WetlandDesignated1 October 1981Referencexc2xa0no.230[2]
Keoladeo National Park or Keoladeo Ghana National Park formerly known as the Bharatpur Bird Sanctuary in Bharatpur, Rajasthan, India is a famous avifauna sanctuary that hosts thousands of birds, especially during the winter season.
Keoladeo Ghana National Park is a man-made and man-managed wetland and one of the national parks of India.
The park was established as a national park on 10 March 1982.
The UNESCO convention for listing goes on to explain the criteria the selection of Keoladeo Ghana National Park as a World Heritage Site under the Natural Criteria iv of Operational Guidelines 2002 and the description which follows is that the park is a xe2x80x9cHabitat of rare and endangered species.
Great egret at Keoladeo Ghana National Park
Sambar deer in Keoladeo Ghana National Park
As per the MoEF, the proposal is beyond the purview of the existing centrally sponsored scheme of the MoEF, seems to be viable and has the potential to put an end to the eternal water scarcity in Bharatpur National Park.
Due to acute water scarcity, the ecosystem of the Park has been affected badly and this has resulted in reduction in the arrival of migratory birds in the National Park.
Water supply is essential for the National Park, which is a wetland and a Ramsar site facing acute shortage of water for the last few years.
While hunting has ceased and the area declared a national park in 1982, its continued existence is dependent on a regulated water supply from a reservoir outside the park boundary.