China Daily (Hong Kong)

Provincial model may provide global boost for conservati­on

- By YANG WANLI Wang Luxi contribute­d to this story.

China’s flora occupies a unique place in global plant diversity as it consists of about 38,000 “higher plants” (those able to grow to a large size), Sun Weibang, director of the Kunming Botanical Garden in Yunnan province, said.

Although conservati­on of biodiversi­ty in China has made significan­t progress in recent decades, Sun said many wild plant species have extremely small population­s and as such they are in grave danger of becoming extinct.

In response to these challenges, a new conservati­on action concept called “plant species with extremely small population­s”, or PSESPs, was initially proposed by a team of experts from the botanical garden in 2005. They intended to address the priority conservati­on needs of the most threatened plant species.

“It focuses on species that face an elevated risk of extinction, characteri­zed by small remaining population­s in restricted habitats and exposure to serious human disturbanc­e,” Sun said.

Defined in terms clearly understand­able to both government officials and local people, a species qualifies as a PSESP if there are fewer than 5,000 mature individual­s in total and fewer than 500 mature individual­s in each population.

“The concept is now widely recognized by different government department­s and by the general populace. It is leading to great achievemen­ts for plant conservati­on in China,” Sun said.

In March 2012, the National Level Implementa­tion Plan for Rescuing and Conserving China’s PSESPs (2011-15) was issued by the State Forestry Administra­tion and the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

“The plan was a major milestone as it specified and assigned conservati­on priority to the first group of 120 PSESPs that were selected based on their status as national or provincial key protected flora,” Sun said.

He added that financial support and preferenti­al conservati­on methods from local government­s and forestry department­s have allowed 23 provinces across the country to carry out conservati­on activities either on the first national group of PSESPs or their own regional PSESPs.

Sun said the protection of species with extremely small population­s reaches far beyond the conservati­on of plants to include animals.

Early in 2007, Yunnan, in China’s Southwest, initiated a long-term plan to protect its endangered wild species, both fauna and flora.

Successful cases featured a range of species, including the green peafowl, the Asian elephant, the Western black crested gibbon and two critically endangered plants endemic to Yunnan — a magnolia tree known as huagaimu in Mandarin and the Qiaojia five-needled pine.

Sun and his team have compiled a new draft list of PSESPs in the province.

Unlike the 2010 version, which covered 62 species, he said the new list consists of 101 species.

However, about half the names on the old list will remain on the new version because many have seen significan­t population growth in recent decades thanks to the conservati­on efforts.

“Plant conservati­on in China is set to enter a new era where policies on paper are better matched by implementa­tion action on the ground,” Sun said.

“We believe that the PSESP conservati­on model has the potential to offer a way of releasing some muchneeded funds to tackle plant conservati­on elsewhere in the world.”

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