Yushan National Park is  located in the Central Mountain Range of  Taiwan. With the Yushan Main   Peak being the center of  the entire  park, the park covers an area with a vast expanse. It crosses over  the  four couties of Nantou, Chiayi, Kaohsiung  and Hualien, covering a vast  expanse of area of over 105,000 hectares. It is a  typical subtropical  mountainous nation park.
                                         
Within  the park, there are  spectacular sights of peaks. Being 30 out of the Taiwan  Hundred  Mountains, they includeYushan Peaks and Siouguluan Mountain, Mabolashi   Mountain, Dafenjian Mountain, Sinkang Mountain and Guan Mountain. Some  are  magnificently elegant with extensive vehemence. Others are bizarre  and  marvelous peaks, each with their own style. Naturally formed, such  landscapes  are extremely beautiful. Meannwhile, the park also covers  the origin of the  hydro system for the central, southern and eastern  areas of Taiwan Province,  making it a close relationship with the  livelihood of the public at the public  at the lower reaches of the  river.
                                         
The  ground area of Yushan  ranges from the elevation of 300m to 3,952m.  It possesses the entire  eco-system that bears the breeds luxuriant, different  kinds of forest  vegetation. From the lowly elevated ground, vegetation that  could be  seen in the order of ascending elevation are: broad leaf forest,   conifer broad mixed forest, spruce fir forest, humlock fir forest, the  colossal  alpine fir forest, the short entangled shrub and alpine  naturally grown  vegetation form by the Yushan single seed juniper and  Yushan  Azalea/rhododendron. On the main ridge of the Central Mountain  Range there are  numerous spreads of dwarf bamboo plains.
There  are about 50 species  of mammals in the park. Among therm, Formosan serow,  Formosan sambar,  Formosan black bear, Formosan wild boar/Sus scrofa taivanus,  Formosan  Reeve’s muntjac and Fomosan rock-mondy are the most precious   large-sized animals within the park. Moreover within the park there is a   complex bird kind of different species of about 151 species. This  embraces  almost all of the resident birds throughout the forests of  Taiwan. Among them, the Mikado  pheasant, Swinhoe’s pheasant, Formosan  barwing, Steere’s Liocichla and Taiwan  Yuhina are species endemic to  Taiwan,  Besides, according to surveying records, the park has  approximately 228 species  of butterfly, which takes up half of all the  butterfly species in Taiwan.  Reptilians consist of 18 species. Species  endemic to Taiwan such as the Alishan  turtle-designed snake, Sauter’s  ground snake and Tree lizard are of larger  quantities. There are 13  species of amphibians, among which the Formosan  Salamander and Sonani’s  s Salamander are remnants fauna of the Ice Age that  possess an  unusually high value of academic research. In the mountain streams  are  Varicorhinus alticorpus (Taiwan  ku fish) and Hemimyzon taitungenisis,  two species of the freshwater fish  endemic to Taiwan.
In  terms of cultural and  historical traces, there are the Ching Dynasty Batongguan  Historic  Trail, the Japnanese Occupation Era Batongguan Traversing Road and the   Guanshan Traversing Road  near the southern Cross-Island Provincial  Highway, all of which are important  historical traces. The entire park  had once been the region where the Bunun  aboriginal tribe lived that  left behind many traces of old community sites and  heart-touching  evetnts of the rebellion against the Japanese government.
These  abundant resources of  precious nature, people and culture within the park are  all of the  nation’s appreciation. Most importantly, this is an environment that   provides people a site for direct contact with the nature, a place for  spiritual  leisure and revival of vitality. It is also the most  excellent paradisiacal  land, pure and clean to be inherited by later  generations in future.