China Daily

Images capture wild cat at highest elevation to date

- By YAN DONGJIE yandongjie@chinadaily.com.cn

Images of an Asian golden cat have been captured at a record high elevation in the Yarlung Tsangpo Grand Canyon National Nature Reserve in Metog county, Xizang autonomous region.

The infrared footage was recorded at an elevation of 4,415 meters, surpassing the previous record of 4,300 meters in Lhari county, Nagchu, Xizang.

The Asian golden cat is a firstclass national protected wild species and has been listed as near threatened on the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature Red List.

According to Li Cheng, an expert on the Asian golden cat from Xizijiang Ecological Conservati­on Center, the global population of these cats has experience­d a significan­t decline in recent years due to factors such as the loss and fragmentat­ion of habitat.

“In China, sightings of the Asian golden cat have been recorded in places such as southeaste­rn Xizang, western Sichuan, western and southern Yunnan, southern Gansu and southern Shaanxi in the past two years. Currently, the Yarlung Tsangpo Grand Canyon region hosts a relatively large population of these cats,” he said.

“Moreover, the Yarlung Tsangpo Grand Canyon area is one of the most diverse and complex regions in terms of the color variations of the Asian golden cat. At present, at least six color variations have been recorded, including tawny, reddishbro­wn, deep red, marbled, gray and black. The genetic diversity here is relatively well preserved,” he added.

“In the infrared camera footage, an adult Asian golden cat was seen surveying the ridgeline of a highaltitu­de meadow before slowly passing in front of the camera,” Zhao Xiang, director of the Shan Shui Conservati­on Center, a nongovernm­ent organizati­on dedicated to species conservati­on.

Li said Asian golden cats generally inhabit tropical and subtropica­l forests. At elevations of over 4,000 meters, where snow covers the ground for half of the year, it is the domain of snow leopards, rather than the typical habitat for Asian golden cats.

“The discovery of the Asian golden cat at such a high altitude not only enhances our understand­ing of their behavior but also indicates their broad range of activity and good adaptabili­ty,” he added.

The forestry and grassland bureau of Metog county, in collaborat­ion with the Shan Shui Conservati­on Center, the Peking University Center for Nature Conservati­on and Social Developmen­t, and the Xizijiang Ecological Conservati­on Center, has conducted infrared camera surveys with the support of the China Green Carbon Foundation and the Zhongjin Public Welfare Foundation.

The research team has set up 304 infrared cameras, recording over 300 instances of Asian golden cat activity at 105 locations, ranging from 812 to 4,415 meters in elevation.

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