Officials in Northwest China's Shaanxi Province have outlined plans to
improve panda protection in the coming five years.
"We will build five new nature reserves for panda protection in
the Qinling Mountains, a major habitat of the rare animal," Sun
Chengqian, deputy director of Shaanxi Provincial Forestry
Department, told China Daily on Tuesday.
The newly designed nature reserves will enlarge protected living
areas to 500,000 hectares from the present 180,100 hectares, and
cover an estimated 80 percent of panda habitats, Sun said.
The mountains are home to approximately 300 pandas.
"And the remaining 20 percent of habitats, which are small and
scattered around the Qinling Mountains, will be protected by 19
protection spots," the deputy director said.
The province will also improve and complete construction of its
giant panda protection and management system, and build a panda
information management and patrol inspection and monitoring system
by the end of 2010.
"This will mean better protection for the rare animals and help
enlarge their population," Sun said.
The Qinling Mountains, located in the centre of the province,
are a major panda habitat and boast the top species density in
China.
The animals here are a rare subspecies, different from those
living in Sichuan and Gansu Provinces.
"Because of its comparatively small population, the Qinling
panda needs more protection. The newly designed nature reserves are
just one of our protection efforts, " Zhao Xuemin, vice-minister of
Ministry of Forestry, said at a working conference held early this
month in Xi'an, capital of the province.
Zhao also declared at the conference that after 20 years of
effort, China's panda population in the wild had increased from
1,100 to 1,596, with 183 being artificially fed.
The area of protected habitats has increased from 1.4 million
hectares to 2.3 million hectares.
(China Daily June 23, 2006)
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