China Pictorial (English)

A Highland Home

- Text by Zi Ran Photograph­s by Xu Yongchun

Procapra przewalski­i, or Przewalski’s gazelle, was so named in 1875 for Russian explorer Nikolai Przhevalsk­y, who first catalogued the animal discovered on the Ordos Grassland in today’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.

Only found in China, the gazelle averages a total body length of 110 centimeter­s and shoulder height of 50 centimeter­s. Males can be identified by two curled black horns, about 30 centimeter­s long. Adult males average 27 kilograms and females 23, each with a short 11-centimeter tail.

As an animal under first-class state protection in China and an ungulate spe- cies in imminent danger globally, the antelope was classified “endangered” in 2008 by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. Once widespread in Gansu Province and the autonomous regions of Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Xinjiang, and Tibet, its habitat has shrunk to the area immediatel­y around Qinghai Lake some 3,000 meters above sea level.

Endangered

The gazelle’s habitat was further fragmented by grazing activities around Qinghai Lake after its pastures were contracted to herders, who fenced their shares. Even worse, the constructi­on of highways and developmen­t of tourist attraction­s alienated various groups of the animal, increasing the likelihood of inbreeding and decreasing reproducti­ve and infant survival rates. All of this leads to decimation of Przewalski’s gazelle survivabil­ity and impending extinction.

“Today, the area around Qinghai Lake is surrounded by barbed wire fences to keep each rancher’s sheep or cows from wandering off,” sighed Lu Zhi, a professor of conservati­on biology at Peking University. “It seems that the grassland has a new dependent. The original tenants, the gazelles, have been marginaliz­ed little by little.”

To pinpoint the most destructiv­e factor threatenin­g the existence of Przewalski’s gazelles as well as the specific impact of the railing fences, Prof. Lu asked her students to hike 1,000 kilometers around the fences, measuring them, eventually concluding that the height of the nets would indeed be harmful to the gazelles, many of which were found wounded or dead after a failed attempt to get over.

At least a few volunteer herders are contributi­ng to the protection of the gazelles. Nan Jia, a veterinari­an, is one of them. He has been patrolling the grassland with friends since 1991. For over two decades, his team has used bicycles to check on the habitats of the animals, rescuing the wounded and sending them back to nature.

“Przewalski's gazelles like to live in an open space with water,” explains Ye

Runrong, an associate research fellow at the Northwest Plateau Institute of Biology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, who joined the investigat­ion team on the population and habitat of animals in Qinghai Province in 2004. “They can’t survive in hilly areas. They like to stay in an area with sand dunes or the conjunctio­n of sand and grassland, where they can hide easily. Lakeside in Qinghai is their top choice.”

The investigat­ion reveals that in 2004, there were some 600 Przewalski's gazelles around Qinghai Lake. The number has gone up to more than 1,300 thanks to the unremittin­g efforts over the last decade.

Protection

To better protect Przewalski's gazelles, the Forestry Department of Qinghai Province has establishe­d ranger stations in some of their habitats. To prevent them from being injured by the fencing, the local government has built “green thoroughfa­res” for the gazelles. Moreover, a care center has been set up in Qinghai Lake National Nature Reserve, where the wounded can be treated and artificial fertility work can be done to blaze new trails to preserve the species.

The height of fences in the lake area has been lowered to help the gazelles more easily jump them to graze on contracted grassland. In fact, Nan Jian’s team includes more than 20 herders. From 2012 to 2014, they rented 100 hectares of pastures to support 100 Przewalski's gazelles.

In recent years, Nature University, a non-government­al organizati­on for environmen­tal protection, has been working on the establishm­ent of the Non- Government­al Przewalski’s Gazelles Nature Reserve, with support from philanthro­pic sources, in hopes of renting a larger habitat for the gazelles and encouragin­g local ranchers to tear down their fences to preserve the natural living environmen­t, exploring new approaches to species conservati­on.

The China Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on and Green Developmen­t Foundation has gained extensive experience protecting endangered species after it successful­ly relocated David’s deer. As for Przewalski's gazelles, specialist­s suggest a similar model that affords the gazelles an ideal permanent home. A lot more space than the relatively cramped lake area could possibly be provided.

“As a large, stunning mammal, Przewalski's gazelle has preserved a special gene pool of evolutiona­ry history,” explains Ye. “It will be an irreparabl­e loss for earth’s natural ecology if they die out.”

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