The Star Malaysia

‘Extinct’ trees found in Chongqing

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CHONGQING: In southwest China’s Chongqing municipali­ty, thuja sutchuenen­sis, an evergreen coniferous tree previously announced to be extinct, is expanding its territory.

At a plant nursery in Chengkou county, seedlings of the size of a hand were sprayed with water under a dozen shower nozzles.

Staff said 40,000 thuja seedlings had been raised at the breeding base and would be transplant­ed in the wild when they were taller.

The Sichuan thuja, a species in the cypress family, is native to Chongqing’s Chengkou county. Specimens were first collected by the French missionary Paul Guillaume Farges in 1891.

Almost 100 years later, the trees were no longer spotted in the wild.

In 1998, the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) announced the “extinct” status of the thuja.

The Chinese government also removed it from its list of protected wild plants.

However, a wild plant investigat­ion team rediscover­ed it in Chengkou after searching for half a year the following year.

After verificati­on, the IUCN adjusted its conservati­on status from “extinct” to “endangered”.

On the steep ridges of the Daba Mountains, about 3,000 wild plants struggled to survive the harsh natural environmen­t.

A wild thuja several hundred years old stood two metres tall.

Due to its scarcity and unique apple-like fragrance, items made from the thuja could be sold for twice the price of gold, which led to illegal felling.

A national nature reserve and a breeding base were establishe­d in the Daba Mountains to protect the species.

According to Zhang Shiqiang, director of the nature reserve, human activities have since been reduced in protection areas to create a good environmen­t for the tree.

Over the past two years, 200,000 seedlings have been transplant­ed in the tree’s native habitat, which has also expanded by 43.3ha thanks to afforestat­ion efforts. —

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