Scientific Name: Pseudois nayaur
Conservation Status: IUCN Red List status: Least Concern: Wild (Life) Protection Act, 1972: Schedule I
The Blue sheep or Bharal is a medium-sized bovid native to the high Himalayas , It lives in the high mountains of Asia (China, India , Pakistan , Nepal, Bhutan, Tibet, Myanmar)

Distribution in India
- Himachal Pradesh – Lahul and Spiti
- Ladakh – Zanskar and Nubra regions , Hemis National Park
- Uttarakhand – Govind Pasu Vihar, Kedarnath wildlife sanctuary, Badrinath Range, Nanda Devi National Park
- Eastern Himalayas – Sikkim and western Arunachal Pradesh
Characteristics
- Displays morphological characters of both sheep and goat
- Dense coat is slate grey in colour, sometimes with a bluish sheen on the dorsal side; underparts and knees are white. Underside of neck and front of all four legs are black, giving a dull and inconspicuous colouring which blends with the terrain and is difficult to spot.
- Mixed feeder – grasses , herbs , shrubs and fleshy roots
- Rutting (annual mating season ) November to end of January, gestation 150-160 days. Normally gives birth to a single offspring, but twinning is not uncommon.
- The horns are found in both sexes, the horns are shorter in females.
- Shows limited altitudinal migration
- Group size is small and varies according to season and habitat quality. The average group size is 11, maximum size of over 200
- Male bharals show little interest in females until the females are in estrus,
- Aggressive behaviours include broadside display, horning vegetation, jerking, lunging, head shakes, jumping, butt, and clashes among the members.