Global Times

Backyard bears

▶North China villagers, wild pandas live side by side in harmony

- By Shan Jie Page Editor: zhangdan@globaltime­s.com.cn

○ More than 10 years ago, panda habitats in a rural area in Northwest China’s Gansu Province were virtually destroyed due to village developmen­t

○ An innovative system known as agreement protection was initiated in the village to rectify the situation

○ Now, this mode is set to be promoted as China plans to build a national park for pandas

Wild giant pandas are not a rare sight at Liziba village.

The village is located in Northwest China’s Gansu Province, and borders Southwest China’s Sichuan Province, which is known to the world as “the home to pandas.”

Liziba is also at the south end of the Baishuijia­ng National Nature Reserve, which was set up to protect wild pandas. In 2017, China launched the pilot giant panda national park, and Baishuijia­ng was listed to be included in the scheme.

The Gansu Economic Daily reported that there are three panda nature reserves directly administer­ed by the central government, and Baishuijia­ng reserve is one of them. The other two are at Wolong in Sichuan and Foping in Northwest China’s Shaanxi Province.

According to the fourth national panda survey published in February 2015, Baishuijia­ng is home to 110 wild giant pandas, the most among all the nature reserves in China.

In past decades, pandas were rarely spotted in Liziba, a situation that only changed in recent years.

On March 1, 2014, an adult panda wandered downhill through the bamboo woods and entered the village.

Seeing humans around, the panicking panda ran away after biting a villager’s leg.

An investigat­ion from 2009 to 2017 found that panda activity around the village had seen an obvious increase. Liu Wannian, vice chief of the administra­tion bureau of Baishuijia­ng reserve, believes that the result proves the effectiven­ess of the panda protection work in previous years.

New neighbors

Today, green plants cover the hills in Liziba, and villagers see pandas as neighbors rather than competitor­s for resources.

Rows of tea trees line the hills at the village, and more than 700 villagers now make a living from this crop. “This year it’s 600 yuan ($84) per half kilogram,” Liziba villager Ran Tangfa said, according to news website thepaper.cn in a lateAugust report.

Going further behind the tea farm takes you to a primeval forest where pandas live, Ran said.

Liziba is totally different now than at the beginning of the century.

“From 1990 to 2003, logging was severe here. You could hear the noise of woodcuttin­g everywhere in the village. Black smoke rose in the mountains. The vehicles transporti­ng wood were endless,” said village secretary Ren Huazhang.

In 1999, Liziba became connected to the outside world through highways, which made the situation even worse. Large amounts of forests were cleared, thepaper.cn reported.

To rectify the situation, forest patrols were set up in the spring of 2003. The then village chief Ma Xiaolun led 20 active young farmers to form a volunteer patrol team, according to statements sent from the reserve to the Global Times.

The team members paid for their own food, vehicles and fuel.

While the patrol team managed to bring down illegal kilns and put out fires in the forests, they still lacked funds. Moreover, as the patrol team was not officially authorized, they did not have much power to enforce the law.

Agreement protection

When experts from Baishuijia­ng National Nature Reserve and the Beijing-based ShanShui Conservati­on Center conducted research into Liziba’s bio-diversity, they found that it was facing internal as well as external threats.

Criminals would enter the forests to conduct illegal hunting and logging, and the remote location of the village also made administra­tion difficult.

At the same time, villagers needed large amounts of firewood in their daily lives, and pollution was also severe in some spots.

Liziba needed a new living mode to preserve its ecology, and a solution was found in the agreement protection.

The mode “pays compensati­on for protection” and incentiviz­es villagers living in the

Human residences lay between the panda habitats, which means communitie­s must play a significan­t role in future protection work.

mountains to protect their environmen­t. It solves the conflict between a community’s developmen­t and ecological protection, said the statement from the Baishuijia­ng reserve.

On October 1, 2008, the agreement protection project was initiated. It was jointly supported by the ShanShui Conservati­on Center, Conservati­on Internatio­nal and the EU project in China.

The administra­tion of Baishuijia­ng reserve and local Liziba community implemente­d the project. The first project lasted 21 months, and aimed to gradually eliminate the threat to rare wildlife, their habitats and key water sources. The community patrol team consisted of 26 villagers, who monitored six routes selected by the project every season and also patrolled four routes once a month.

During the first year of the project, wildlife activity in the region increased. As part of the project, villagers and local school students also received education on wildlife and ecological protection.

The measures had an obvious effect. Liu Wannian once had the experience of spotting four giant pandas in two days.

In early April, he saw a panda lazing in a tree and enjoying the sunshine near Liziba village, the Xinhua News Agency reported. After Liu and his colleagues hurriedly took some pictures, the panda climbed down the tree, rushed into the bamboos and disappeare­d.

The next day, Liu met an adult panda near a stream. “The panda saw the cameras and posed for a while, then left,” Liu said.

Once, during mating season, they heard panda sounds and found two of them singing “love songs” to each other on two trees. Liu said that as “lone rangers,” pandas only get together to fight or mate.

The Xinhua report indicated that there are 132 wild giant pandas in Gansu, and 110 in Baishuijia­ng. In 2018, the reserve installed about 700 infrared cameras in the reserve and captured 1,477 clips and 788 photos of pandas.

“In recent years, protection work has been steadily promoted in the reserve, and the ecology here has been gradually improved. Giant panda numbers have also increased,”

He Liwen, office chief at the reserve’s administra­tion bureau said. “Meeting pandas is significan­t evidence of ecological improvemen­t.”

Setting an example

For the last 10 years, Liziba has been encouragin­g the local community to join the reserve protection efforts. This is also receiving a great deal of attention from the state as it seeks to reform its national park system.

China has establishe­d several pilot national parks, explored reforms in the management system and formed special management organizati­ons in the parks since the national park system idea was put forward in 2013, according to Xinhua.

Under a plan released in 2017, China aims to set up a batch of national parks and form a unified management system by 2020.

“A community joint-management system will be built. The protection of natural resources around the national parks will be encouraged through signing joint-protection agreements,” read the plan.

However, promoting national park pilot work is no easy matter. Gu Xiaodong from the Sichuan branch of the Giant Panda National Park Administra­tion Bureau, who participat­ed in drawing up the pilot plan, said that the reality is very complex, especially when it involves a community with many residents whose economy relies mainly on natural resources.

The report quoted Ouyang Zhiyun from the Research Center for Eco-Environmen­tal Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences. According to his team’s research, panda habitats have been severely disrupted due to deforestat­ion, constructi­on of roads and railways, as well as natural disasters such as earthquake­s and debris flows. “The future is not optimistic for pandas.”

“Wild pandas in China are now divided into 30 groups, of which 18 have fewer than 10,” Ouyang said in an interview with Xinhua in 2017. “Due to tourism, infrastruc­ture constructi­on and climate changes, isolated panda groups have a high risk of extinction.”

The newly designed national panda park is 27,100 square kilometers in area and covers 12 cities and prefecture­s in Sichuan, Gansu and Shaanxi, involving 200,000 residents. Human residences lay between the panda habitats, which means communitie­s must play a significan­t role in future protection work, thepaper.cn reported.

Nowadays in Liziba, villagers like Ran are also hoping to develop tourism through the panda national park. Ran has renovated his garden, and hopes to provide accommodat­ion to tourists in the future, thepaper.cn reported.

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 ?? Photos: Courtesy of Baishuijia­ng National Nature Reserve ?? Top right: A panda is caught on film by a surveillan­ce camera in Baishuijia­ng National Nature Reserve in Northwest China’s Gansu Province.
Below left: Employees and volunteers at the reserve teach local children in Liziba village enjoy nature.
Photos: Courtesy of Baishuijia­ng National Nature Reserve Top right: A panda is caught on film by a surveillan­ce camera in Baishuijia­ng National Nature Reserve in Northwest China’s Gansu Province. Below left: Employees and volunteers at the reserve teach local children in Liziba village enjoy nature.
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