XINING --
Over the years, China has made consistent strides in enhancing its ability to
protect the biodiversity of the Sanjiangyuan area in Northwest China's Qinghai
province.
The
Sanjiangyuan area, known as China's "water tower," contains the
headwaters of the Yangtze, Yellow and Lancang rivers. Located at an average
altitude of more than 4,700 meters, Sanjiangyuan National Park is the world's
highest national park covering a total area of 190,700 sq km and boasts one of
the highest concentrations of biodiversity in the world at high altitudes.

An aerial photo of Sanjiangyuan National Park in Northwest China's
Qinghai province. [Photo / China Daily]
Every year,
tens of thousands of pregnant Tibetan antelopes start their migration to Hoh
Xil in around May to give birth and leave with their offspring in late July.
During the
1980s and 1990s, due to poaching sprees, the population of Tibetan antelopes in
Hol Xil dropped to less than 20,000. Thanks to the country's active
anti-poaching and biodiversity protection efforts in recent years, Hoh Xil is
now home to more than 70,000 Tibetan antelopes. The status of Tibetan antelopes
in China has been downgraded from "endangered" to "near
threatened."
Since the
establishment of the Longbao national nature reserve, located in the
Sanjiangyuan area, in 1984, the number of bird species in the reserve has
increased from 30 to 138.
According
to Pasang Tsering, head of the management station of the reserve, the number of
black-necked cranes, a species under first-class national protection, in the
reserve rose from a few dozen to more than 200, and the bar-headed geese
numbered over 10,000 at its peak.
This year,
the reserve has been listed as a "wetland of international
importance," and its ecosystem and biodiversity will undergo comprehensive
and systematic protection, Pasang Tsering added.
The Namse
township of Qinghai's Yushu Tibetan autonomous prefecture, also located in the
Sanjiangyuan area and through which the Lancang River flows, is known as the
"hometown of snow leopards." This distinction stems from the frequent
sightings of this highly protected species, which is under China's highest
national-level protection.
More than
80 individual snow leopards have been recorded in Namse, where these creatures
coexist with other wildlife, including lynx and white-lipped deer.
Tian Jian,
chief engineer of the forestry and grassland bureau of Qinghai Province, said
85 percent of wildlife habitats in the province have been put under natural
conservation management, and the population of rare and endangered wild animals
has increased significantly.
According
to Zhang Yu, an official with the bureau, in the past decade, remarkable
progress has also been made in the protection and research of rare and
endangered wild plants in Qinghai.
By
promoting the development of a natural reserve system with national parks as
the main body, more than 75 percent of wild plants in the province have been
effectively protected, helping to build a national gene bank for the genetic
resources of wild organisms on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
(Source: China
Daily)