China Daily Global Edition (USA)

RULES ON RARE PLANTS A BOON FOR BOTANISTS State Council revision streamline­s approval process for those taking a walk on the wildside

- By HU YONGQI huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Shen Jianyong’s job requires a lot of patience. As a botanist, he has spent countless hours searching for rare plants in the wilds of Southwest China — and sometimes months waiting for the government to give him permission to take a sample.

His research team is charged with collecting and preserving wild plants, including endangered species, for the Xishuangba­nna Tropical Botanical Garden in Yunnan province.

Shen, who has worked for the garden for three years, said he finds the job meaningful, adding that the applicatio­n process to take samples of plants on the national protection list was too long, sometimes lasting up to two months.

To solve this problem, the central government has revised the rules in order to streamline the process, giving provincial authoritie­s more power in approving such activities.

The move was among a range of amendments recently made to 15 State regulation­s, signed by Premier Li Keqiang, according to a State Council notice released on Oct 23.

Along with flora and fauna protection, regulation­s covering transporta­tion, tour guides and constructi­on projects were revised in line with efforts to simplify administra­tive approvals, and stimulate market vitality and social creativity, the notice said.

Four changes were made to the Regulation on the Protection of Wild Plants, which came into effect on Jan 1, 1997, and forbids the collection of National Level I species without permission.

Previously, an applicatio­n to take a sample of an endangered plant would be handled by the provincial authority and then reviewed by the central government — either the State Forestry Administra­tion, which covers wild plants in forests; the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Developmen­t, which covers those in city gardens and at scenic spots; or the Ministry of Agricultur­e.

However, the revision means provincial agricultur­e and forestry department­s, and other authorized institutio­ns, can now directly issue permits to those looking to collect protected species for the purposes of scientific research, artificial cultivatio­n and cultural exchanges.

In addition, provincial government­s no longer need to seek approval from a higher authority before granting permission to researcher­s from other countries and regions who want to survey wild species in their area.

Most of the recent regulatory revisions by the State Council aim to delegate more administra­tive powers to local authoritie­s, according to Chen Tianxiang, a professor of public management at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, Guangdong province.

“Over the past few years, the central government has been promoting administra­tive streamlini­ng and improving government services. The new regulation­s can be seen as a further step in this direction,” he said.

The Xishuangba­nna Tropical Botanical Garden, founded by the Chinese Academy of Sciences, is located in a nature reserve covered by a vast rain forest in the Xishuangba­nna Dai autonomous prefecture. Shen said applicatio­ns for collecting samples must be submitted to the Yunnan Forestry Department, which has denied requests in the past because they involved protected species.

On average, it has usually taken a month to receive a response from the authority, Shen said. Yet after being given a greater level of autonomy, he said the waiting time now could be cut to as little as two weeks.

“The revisions will make our work much easier, for sure. The first time I made such an applicatio­n, it took nearly two months to get approval,” he said. “The move can further promote biodiversi­ty, especially in regions like Yunnan.”

He warned that complicate­d procedures and long waiting times can affect the enthusiasm of botanists. “Some simply don’t want to do the job anymore,” he said.

Shen’s eight-man team focuses on surveying and collecting samples to protect the area’s ecology.

According to the botanical garden, its research and tourism facilities house more than 13,000 species of plant.

In the past 18 months, Shen’s team has surveyed more than 150 endangered plants across Yunnan, a province known for its biodiversi­ty, and found that two of its 347 wild species have vanished.

Chen, at Sun Yat-sen University, added that such research has contribute­d enormously to biodiversi­ty protection, and that botanists like Shen should be encouraged with simplified approval procedures.

“The move can further promote biodiversi­ty, especially in regions like Yunnan.”

botanist with the Xishuangba­nna Tropical Botanical Garden in Yunnan province

Shen Jianyong,

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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