Global Times

In need of preservati­on

▶ Human activities in India threaten Pangong Tso lake ecosystem

- By Cao Siqi, Liu Caiyu and Liu Xuanzun Scan to read and share story on your phone

India has not only threatened the peace and stability in the region around Pangong Tso lake by inciting frequent tussles along the lakeshore, it is also threatenin­g the unique ecosystem of the high-altitude, 134 kilometer-long lake that forms part of the border between China and India.

A research paper recently released by the National Center for Microbial Resource-National Center for Cell Science, a national facility funded by the Department of Biotechnol­ogy and Government of India, shows increased human activities, especially from tourists staying in the villages near Pangong, has led to an influx of nutrients allowing bacteria to prosper.

The relative abundance of Enterobact­er - natural residents of the human intestinal tract, soil, water, animals and plants in the lake is the cause of various hospital-acquired infections in immunocomp­romised patients, the research shows.

A Global Times reporter found that at the village of Maan, many tents near the lakeshore are accommodat­ion for about 10,000 people.

Praveen Rahi, a researcher fellow from the center, told the Global Times that the sample collected for this study was done in August 2016, when there was less militariza­tion in the region.

But militariza­tion has recently increased in response to the escalation of tension on the Line of Actual Control (LAC). The study provides baseline informatio­n, which will be useful for future studies, Rahi said.

India has a significan­t and growing military presence near Pangong Tso, the middle of which forms the LAC. The lake is five kilometers wide at its broadest point and around 68 percent of the lake is on the Chinese side.

According to commercial satellite imagery, military facilities including buildings and roads have been built and expanded on the Indian side over the past few years, indicating increased military activities.

One example of this is what the Indians call the “Finger 3” on the northern shore of Pangong Tso lake, which is a military camp that started constructi­on around 2013 and 2014 and has expanded since then.

In late 2016 to early 2017, huge letters spelling “ITBP,” the acronym for Indo Tibetan Border Police, were painted on a mountain near the site.

Indian facilities were also seen near the “Finger 4” in satellite images in June

2020, while none were seen in 2019.

Human activities on the Indian side of the high-altitude saltwater body raised concerns not only among the country’s bacterial study community, but also diplomatic and environmen­tal protection experts in China, who worry that the worsening situation may harm the lake’s pristine ecosystem and possibly wreck China’s efforts in protecting the lake.

The Indian government is being urged to do much more to protect the lake’s ecosystem and to take appropriat­e action to dispose of human waste.

Pangong Tso lake is the pearl of the Qinghai-Tibet Platteau and its ecology is very fragile. Even though there is no environmen­tal protection agreement between India and China, and the confrontat­ion between the two sides along the border is ongoing, India should protection pay great importance to environmen­tal of the lake, Zhao Gancheng, Times. Internatio­nal Studies director at of the the Studies, told the Global Shanghai Institute for Center for Asia-Pacific

Hou Juzhi, a research fellow from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, told the Global Times that he has been studying the Pangong Tso lake since 2010 and has witnessed a rise water level which has been caused by climate change and melting glaciers. The water quality of the lake on the Chinese side has so far not shown major changes.

Hou is a team member of the second scientific expedition to the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and has been conducting research on the lake sediments to learn about the lake’s climate, environmen­t and ecological changes over the last 200 years.

According to Hou, Chinese researcher­s have collected protection been paying garbage during great attention to environmen­tal and field surveys. For example, they

disposed of it in the nearby county’s trash cans. “Ritu county is the closest county to the

Pangong Tso lake, some

12 kilometers away, and it has establishe­d sound waste cycling facilities,” Hou said.

Pangong Tso lake’s physical-chemical properties on the Chinese side are different from the Indian side as the lake’s waters to the east in China are fresh water and drinkable, said Hou. He’s worried ecological damage brought by human activities in India due to militariza­tion and tourism will jeopardize efforts the Chinese government has made to protect the lake.

Local farmers and herdsmen were hired to regularly patrol the lake to stop illegal fishing and the theft of bird’s eggs.

According to media report, the implementa­tion of a series of measures, such as routine patrols, ecological protection and restoratio­n projects, has significan­tly improved the quality of water, air, soil and vegetation of the lake and its surroundin­g areas.

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 ?? Photos: Xinhua, IC ?? The Pangong Lake
Photos: Xinhua, IC The Pangong Lake
 ?? Photo: Xinhua ?? ▴Brown-headed gulls on Pangong Lake
Photo: Xinhua ▴Brown-headed gulls on Pangong Lake
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