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Leveraging a unique ecosystem

Zhejiang reserve hosts rare flora and fauna, with conservati­on efforts benefiting local people

- By MA ZHENHUAN and QI XIAO in Hangzhou Contact the writers at mazhenhuan@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese serow drinks from a clear brook, a leopard prowls stealthily through the mountains at night, an Asiatic black bear roams the forest in broad daylight and a crested serpent eagle flaps its way across the sky.

These are among some of the most common sights in the Qianjiangy­uan section of the Qianjiangy­uan-Baishanzu National Park, which was created in 2020 following the integratio­n of the Qianjiangy­uan and Baishanzu national parks.

Located in the northweste­rn part of Kaihua county in Zhejiang province, the Qianjiangy­uan section of the park covers an area of 252 square kilometers and includes three reserves, four towns and 21 administra­tive villages. It was one of the first 10 pilot national parks created in 2016 to protect China’s environmen­t.

As its name suggests, Qianjiangy­uan is the source of the Qiantang River, the “mother river” of Zhejiang province. It is still home to a large area of native evergreen broad-leaved vegetation typical of lowland mid-subtropica­l zones that is increasing­ly rare in other parts of the world.

The area is home to 61 species of rare and endangered plants, 14 of which are native to China, as well as a diverse avian community, and accounts for over half the bird species found in Zhejiang.

China’s forestry authoritie­s believe that an ecosystem of this scale is unique in the world, according to Fu Bojie, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

“It is of great value to environmen­tal protection and scientific research worldwide,” Fu said.

Qianjiangy­uan is also home to rare and endangered animals, including natives such as the black muntjac, an animal that Wei Fuwen, another CAS academicia­n, said was comparable to the giant panda. Worldwide, about 10 percent of black muntjacs, which belong to the deer family, live in Qianjiangy­uan.

A few hundred kilometers to the south lies the Baishanzu area of the park. Situated in Qingyuan county, Lishui city, it is named after one of the highest mountains in the area and covers 505 sq km. Some 1,860 meters in height, Baishanzu literally means the “ancestor of hundreds of mountains”, which speaks of its significan­ce.

Much like Qianjiangy­uan, Baishanzu is also a natural habitat for rare and endangered plant species. Visitors can see the world’s rarest conifer, the Baishanzu fir, or Abies beshanzuen­sis. Currently, the reserve is home to just three of the trees, which have been classified as critically endangered by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature.

In addition, 2,102 species of vascular plants, 416 vertebrate­s and 632 macrofungi have been identified in the Baishanzu area.

The rich ecosystem and biodiversi­ty of the national park have become a focus of research for both Chinese and foreign scientists, who have set up biodiversi­ty monitoring platforms, research stations and climate change centers.

In June, a new species of frog was discovered in Baishanzu during a biodiversi­ty survey, and has been aptly named Megophrys baishanzue­nsis.

The research programs support

China’s ongoing efforts to protect wild flora and fauna and their habitats.

In late May 2019, scientists from Zhejiang University successful­ly returned three artificial­ly-cultured Baishanzu fir seedlings to their natural habitat, just a year after they had cultivated the world’s first Baishanzu fir seedlings using embryo technology. More is being done to expand the naturally grown population of these living fossils, and it is hoped the species will eventually be removed from the critically endangered list.

For villagers in the Qianjiangy­uanBaishan­zu

National Park, conservati­on does not come at the expense of livelihood­s. Instead, innovative policies have helped improve lives.

In 2018, the Qiangjiang­yuan administra­tion began to roll out land easement reforms under which villagers who collective­ly own large portions of forest and individual­ly hold rights of use are encouraged to lease the land to authoritie­s for conservati­on and management. In exchange, they receive compensati­on.

Hengzhong village, one of the most remote in Kaihua county, was the first to test the waters.

The 0.73 hectares of forest allocated to Yu Jiaqi, a villager, were not managed and provided his family with no income as a result of Yu’s chronic pneumonia. But the situation changed after he signed a conservati­on easement agreement in 2018. “I receive 2,000 yuan ($300) a year,” he said.

All 399 households in the village have now signed up.

In addition, Hengzhong has set up a public fund for forest management and developmen­t and has started businesses related to tourism. Each year, 50,000 yuan from the fund is used toward environmen­tal restoratio­n and protection.

Recently, the reforms have been extended to farmland in and around the national park.

 ?? ??
 ?? JIANG HAN / XINHUA ?? Sun Junwei, professor of ecology at the China Jiliang University in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, and a colleague collect plant saplings during a field survey of the Qianjiangy­uan-Baishanzu National Park in May last year.
JIANG HAN / XINHUA Sun Junwei, professor of ecology at the China Jiliang University in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, and a colleague collect plant saplings during a field survey of the Qianjiangy­uan-Baishanzu National Park in May last year.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A black muntjac is captured on an infrared camera in the national park in Zhejiang.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A black muntjac is captured on an infrared camera in the national park in Zhejiang.
 ?? XINHUA ?? An aerial photo shows part of the Qianjiangy­uan-Baishanzu National Park in Zhejiang province.
XINHUA An aerial photo shows part of the Qianjiangy­uan-Baishanzu National Park in Zhejiang province.

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