Global Times

Nation begins 2nd survey of Tibet plateau to assess ecology

- By Cao Siqi

China on Saturday began its second scientific expedition to the Qinghai- Tibet Plateau to assess the tremendous changes of the past decades due to climate change and human activities.

Following an expedition in the 1970s, researcher­s from the Chinese Academy of Sciences ( CAS) launched an expedition that will last five to 10 years. They will make a comprehens­ive survey of the plateau’s glaciers, biodiversi­ty and ecological changes, as well as monitor changes to the region’s climate.

Their first stop will be Serling Tso, a 2,391- square- kilometer lake that was confirmed to have replaced the Buddhist holy Namtso Lake as Tibet’s largest in 2014. CAS will take more than 100 scientists to the lake area and to the source of the Yangtze, China’s longest river, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

To provide fundamenta­l data for

China’s newest national park, the Third Pole National Park, Hou Juzhi, a CAS research fellow, told the Global Times that his team will conduct research on the lake sediments so that they can learn about the lake’s climate, environmen­t and ecological changes during the past 200 years.

As the source of several major rivers, the plateau supplies water to nearly 2 billion people. It is facing serious challenges, including glacier melt and land deteriorat­ion due to global warming and human activities. Its ecology is fragile and once damaged, it is difficult to recover, said Li Junsheng, an environmen­tal expert at the Chinese Research Academy of Environmen­tal Sciences.

“This expedition will play a significan­t role in discoverin­g new species. They will also seek to explain more natural mysteries and traces of human developmen­t [ on the plateau],” Li said.

Retreating glaciers

China’s first expedition to the plateau was in the 1970s, covering many fields, including geological structure, prehistori­c life, geophysics, climate, zoology and botany. The new round of research will focus on the changes since then.

Zhu Liping, a CAS research fellow leading the lake observatio­n team, told Xinhua that the surface of Serling Tso Lake had expanded 40 percent between 1976 and 2009. Since 1990, water in the plateau’s 1,000 lakes has increased by 100 billion cubic meters.

“Glaciers on the Tibetan plateau are in retreat due to rising temperatur­es. Research shows that glacier ice has decreased by 8,000 square kilometers, or 15 percent, due to climate change. In the long- term, it will have a negative impact on the ecology of the downstream region,” Li said, adding that permafrost melting would also lead to desertific­ation and geo- engineerin­g problems.

A 2015 CAS report predicted that more than 80 percent of Tibetan Plateau permafrost could be gone by the year 2100, and that almost 40 percent of it would be gone within the “near future.”

The report said the plateau has already shown increasing desertific­ation, mainly around the source region of the Yangtze River, where the desert area has reached 33,200 square kilometers, or 66 percent of the total desert land around all the headwaters of China.

Li added that human activities, such as overgrazin­g and illegal mining have also affected the plateau’s ecosystem.

Despite that, experts agreed that the overall situation of the ecological system on the Tibetan plateau is improving.

The CAS report said the Tibetan plateau remains one of the world’s cleanest regions. Pollutant levels recorded on the plateau are similar to those seen across the Arctic, and remain remarkably lower than densely- populated areas. The report attributed it to the efforts of forestry conservati­on and restoratio­n.

The new national park, another major conservati­on effort, will be the world’s largest, at some 2.5 million square kilometers. Researcher­s said part of the summer’s expedition would be to establish the park boundaries, the South China Morning Post reported.

On the archaeolog­ical front, scientists will look for evidence that can prove an earlier archaeolog­ical discovery of a Paleolithi­c ruin at Serling Tso, suggesting that humans might have lived there some 30,000 years ago. Archaeolog­ists will try to answer why humans came to the plateau, where they originated, and how they adapted to highaltitu­de living, said team leader Deng Tao, deputy director of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontolo­gy and Paleoanthr­opology, under CAS.

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