China Daily

Siberian tigers come in from cold

The number of big cats in the northeaste­rn province is rising after decades of conservati­on efforts, as Zhang Zefeng reports from Hunchun, Jilin.

- Contact the writer at zhangzefen­g@ chinadaily.com.cn

One evening in July last year, Yang Yongsheng was washing his feet in a creek near his home in the mountains when he noticed a Siberian tiger staring at him from a bush about 3 meters away.

Suddenly something that had puzzled Yang for a few days became clear. “The tiger did it,” thought the resident of Yilinangou, a village under the jurisdicti­on of Hunchun, Jilin province, Northeast China.

“It” was the fact that on three consecutiv­e nights, dogs Yang kept to guard his yard had gone missing. The three leashes that held them to posts had been torn apart.

Yang rushed home, grabbed his smartphone and returned to the spot, where he managed to take several photos of the tiger. A month later, the animal returned and killed another dog.

A year later, with the help of his son, Yang has installed surveillan­ce cameras at his house, focused on the yard. Despite that, the 76-year-old villager is still concerned about his safety.

“If the tiger shows up again, I could be a victim,” he said. “Tiger numbers, along with their areas of activity, have increased significan­tly in recent years.”

In the late 1990s, Jilin began a project to protect its natural forests, and establishe­d several nature reserves to conserve wildlife habitats. In 2015, commercial logging was banned in the province’s key Stateowned forests to assist the recovery of woodland resources.

“Those efforts fundamenta­lly alleviate the conflict between timber production and the tigers’ need for habitats,” said Wu Zhigang, a researcher at the Jilin Provincial Academy of Forestry Science.

According to the latest data from the State Forestry Administra­tion, during the late 1990s there were at most 14 Siberian tigers and 10 Amur leopards in the Changbai Mountains, which run along China’s border with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Now the figures are 27 and 42 respective­ly, and a number of cubs have also been spotted.

As the number of endangered species rises, the Jilin government has been exploring innovative solutions to settle conservati­on problems in nature reserves and create an animal-friendly environmen­t.

Compensati­on

Early one morning last month, Jia Cunzeng received a call from a neighbor telling him that one of the cows he tended had been found dead at the foot of a mountain where Siberian tigers and other animals live.

Jia, who had previously spotted a tiger’s footprints in the area, suspected that a big cat was responsibl­e.

“The owner paid about 20,000 yuan ($3,000) for the cow last year,” said the 66-yearold herdsman from Lishugou village in Hunchun. “If my assumption is correct, he will be entitled to compensati­on.”

Judging by the bites and scratches on the carcass, Wu Wenming, an official with the Hunchun forestry bureau, concluded that a Siberian tiger had killed the cow.

“The bite on the cow’s neck was fatal,” he said. “The provincial government will reimburse the losses caused by the incident.”

In 2007, Jilin formulated compensati­on guidelines to cover damage caused by wild animals. In recent years, the number of attacks has risen.

According to Zhang Jinyan, an official at the bureau, cases of wild animals, such as tigers, bears and boars, attacking livestock or destroying crops have risen from 228 in 2007 to 707 last year.

This year, tigers have already killed between 60 and 70 animals.

“The reimbursem­ent plan guarantees the interests of local people whose properties are damaged by wild animals,” Wu said. “To a degree, it mitigates conflicts between endangered species and the people who share the land with them.”

Alternativ­e incomes

Since 2013, when China signaled the constructi­on of a national park system, the central government has taken a number of measures, including banning commercial logging in key State-owned forests in the northeaste­rn provinces.

One of the national parks, which straddles Jilin and Heilongjia­ng provinces, is scheduled to become a sanctuary for endangered tigers and leopards.

Since 2015, State-owned forest farms in Jilin have shifted from logging to creating green industries, such as tourism, to raise incomes while protecting the environmen­t.

Wang Caijin, who used to work as a logger at the Dahuangou forest farm in Hunchun, was deeply worried when he was forced to quit his job, the only work he had ever known.

“Loggers who are not allowed to log are like farmers who don’t have land to farm,” he said.

Like many of his former colleagues who have stopped logging and become forest rangers, Wang got a job in the forest, assessing potential fire hazards.

The logging ban removed the forestry bureau’s main source of revenue, so Wang’s salary, which mostly came from government funding, shrank significan­tly.

To raise incomes and accommodat­e the rising number of tourists attracted by recentlyes­tablished scenic spots nearby, the forest farm provided Wang with financial support that enabled him to open a home inn.

The sideline has boosted Wang’s income by an extra 10,000 yuan a month, three times the average wage of a forestry worker. He now owns a car and leads a satisfying life.

“For 32 years, logging was my only source of income,” he said. “Now, I don’t have to rely on labor-intensive work and my income is much higher.”

Officials at the Tianqiaoli­ng forestry bureau in Wangqing, near Hunchun, have also transforme­d the local economy in an ecological­ly friendly way.

In recent years, the bureau has successful­ly cultivated 10,000 mu (666 hectares) of seedlings and 8,000 mu of medicinal herbs, including important ingredient­s of traditiona­l Chinese medicine, such as ginseng.

Incomes are rising as forestry workers take part-time jobs, such as cultivatin­g edible fungi, beekeeping and raising pigs, chickens and frogs.

Last year, the local black fungus industry employed 1,997 workers and generated more than 100 million yuan, according to the bureau.

“We are relying on our renewable forestry resources to achieve economic growth,” said Cao Yongfu, the bureau’s director. “Workers who are willing to make changes to improve their lives are given a lot of support.”

Raising awareness

In addition to time-trusted methods, such as educating hunters to stop them hunting and involving local communitie­s in tiger conservati­on, forestry bureaus are also working to improve awareness of protection among the younger generation.

“We believe that educating younger people is an important and effective method. It can actually affect three generation­s,” said Jia Lihong, director of the publicity center at the Hunchun National Siberian Tiger Nature Reserve.

In 2010, Li Zhixing, secretary-general of the Hunchun Tianhe Siberian Tiger Protection Society, published a textbook called Love my Hometown, Love Siberian Tigers in the hope of improving students’ awareness of the tigers and environmen­tal protection.

“I want the students to learn about ecological matters from the local environmen­t, which is mainly represente­d by Siberian tigers,” Li said, adding that the tiger is an “umbrella species”, whose survival indirectly protects other species in its habitat. “Protecting tigers protects other wildlife in the ecosystem.”

The book has been widely used in Hunchun’s primary and middle schools, and it has been adopted by schools in nearby Wangqing and Huangnihe this year.

Zang Yunjuan, a secondary school teacher who has used the book since it was published, has witnessed a significan­t improvemen­t in students’ awareness.

“In the past, few students understood the importance of Siberian tigers and why they should be protected,” she said.

“Now, they not only understand the necessity of protecting tigers and other endangered species, but they also see the importance of taking care of the local environmen­t.”

I want the students to learn ecological knowledge from the local environmen­t ...”

author of a textbook about tiger protection

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A Siberian tiger photograph­ed in Hunchun, Jilin province, in 2015.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A Siberian tiger photograph­ed in Hunchun, Jilin province, in 2015.
 ??  ?? A valley in Hunchun. Since 2015, State-owned forest farms in Jilin have shifted from logging to green industries, such as tourism. Li Zhixing,
A valley in Hunchun. Since 2015, State-owned forest farms in Jilin have shifted from logging to green industries, such as tourism. Li Zhixing,
 ?? PHOTOS BY ZHANG ZEFENG / CHINA DAILY ?? Sun Yanfa, a retired forestry worker, keeps bees in Wangqing, Jilin.
PHOTOS BY ZHANG ZEFENG / CHINA DAILY Sun Yanfa, a retired forestry worker, keeps bees in Wangqing, Jilin.
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 ??  ?? A worker picks edible fungi at a nature reserve in Wangqing.
A worker picks edible fungi at a nature reserve in Wangqing.

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