China Daily

Interest in endangered wild cats surges

- By YANG WANLI yangwanli@chinadaily.com.cn

Photos of snow leopards and Chinese mountain cats sparked a surge in public interest in the two endangered species last week when a deputy from Qinghai province showed them to President Xi Jinping during the annual meeting of China’s top legislatur­e.

The two photos shown by Kong Qingju, a National People’s Congress deputy from the northweste­rn province, were taken in the Qilian Mountain National Park in recent years.

Before the establishm­ent of the park in 2017, Qinghai’s wildlife had been seriously threatened by overgrazin­g, overdevelo­ped tourism, illegal mining and the general degradatio­n of its vegetation dating back to the 1980s, with wildlife population­s declining sharply, Kong said.

“Thanks to resolute environmen­tal protection efforts from both the government and local people, the Qilian Mountains have been protected under the strictest rules and are now seeing larger green areas, fewer sandstorms and cleaner water,” she said.

Qilian Mountain National Park was establishe­d as one of the country’s 10 pilot national parks. It protects 50,200 square kilometers spanning the border of Qinghai and Gansu provinces, with roughly 15,800 sq km in Qinghai featuring forest, grassland, desert and wetland landscapes.

The ecosystem of the Qilian Mountains has been recovering steadily since the park was establishe­d, with the population­s of some endangered species rebounding.

Animals not seen since the 1990s due to excessive hunting have been captured by infrared cameras several times in recent years. They include snow leopards and Chinese mountain cats, both listed as “vulnerable” by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature.

“Chinese mountain cats are the most mysterious wild animals and the only confirmed locations in the world are the provinces of Qinghai and Sichuan in China,” said Zhang Yu, deputy director of the park’s Qinghai management office.

A photo of five Chinese mountain cats that Kong showed to Xi was taken in July during a survey conducted by the management office and researcher­s from Peking University. It showed a mother cat and her four offspring playing on a mountain.

“For felines that usually give birth to two or three babies at once, such a big family is very rare and precious for the study of this cat,” said Gao Yayue, who is in charge of the management office’s wildlife observatio­n work.

The other photo, showing a fivemember snow leopard family, was taken in the park’s Qinghai section in May 2018.

The snow leopard is a Class A protected animal in China. It is estimated that about 2,000 live in Qinghai, Sichuan and Gansu provinces and the Xinjiang Uygur and Tibet autonomous regions.

The park management office has been observing its snow leopards since 2017, with more than 1,100 cameras covering 5,000 sq km. They have captured more than 3,000 photos and videos of the rare species.

Apart from the two cats, Kong said the park has seen increasing numbers of other State-protected wild animals in recent years thanks to environmen­tal protection efforts.

In December, seven alpine musk deer, classified as “endangered” on the IUCN’s Red List of Threatened Species, were spotted in the park.

In February, a herd of nearly 100 wild red deer under State protection was seen by park rangers.

Zhang said the frequent sightings of wild animals in the park are an indication of an improved environmen­t.

“China has been continuous­ly strengthen­ing wildlife protection efforts in recent years,” he said. “Protected regions have seen their ecosystems and biodiversi­ty improved. That’s the real action that China has taken to promote a green developmen­t path.”

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