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Fauna
and Flora ... ...
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| The precious golden camellia. |
China is one of the countries with the greatest diversity of wildlife
in the world. There are more than 4,400 species of vertebrates,
more than 10 percent of the world's total. There are nearly 500
animal species, 1,189 species of birds, more than 320 species of
reptiles and 210 species of amphibians. Wildlife peculiar to China
includes such well-known animals as the giant panda, golden-haired
monkey, South China tiger, brown-eared pheasant, white-flag dolphin,
Chinese alligator and red-crowned crane, totaling more than 100
species. The giant panda is an especially attractive sight. Heavily
built, it has a docile disposition, and is delightfully adorable.
The 1.2-m-tall red-crowned crane is a snow-white migratory bird.
A distinctive patch of red skin tops its grey-brown head, hence
its name. The white-flag dolphin is one of only two species of freshwater
whale in the world. In 1980, a male white-flag dolphin was caught
for the first time in the Yangtze River, which aroused great interest
among dolphin researchers worldwide.
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| A giant panda with her cubs. |
Species of arbor, is considered as one of the oldest and rarest
plants in the world. The golden larch, one of only five species
of rare garden trees in the world, grow in the mountain areas in
the Yangtze River valley. Its coin-shaped leaves on short branches
are green in spring and summer, turning yellow in autumn. China
is home to more than 2,000 species of edible plants and 3,000 species
of medicinal plants. Ginseng from the Changbai Mountains, safflowers
from Tibet, Chinese wolfberry from Ningxia and notoginseng from
Yunnan and Guizhou are particularly well-known Chinese herbal medicines.
There is a wide variety of flowering plants. A flower indigenous
to China, the elegant and graceful peony is treasured as the "color
of the nation and the scent of heaven." Three famous species
of flowers--the azalea, fairy primrose and rough gentian--grow in
southwest China. During the flowering period, mountain slopes covered
with flowers in a riot of colors form a delightful contrast with
undulating ridges and peaks.
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| Zhalong Natural Protection Zone--the home of red-crown crane.
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In a concerted effort to protect the nation's zoological and botanical
resources, and save species close to extinction, China has established
1.146 nature reserves to protect forests and wildlife, with a total
area of 88.13 million ha. The 15 nature reserves in China, namely,
Sichuan's Wolong and Jiuzhaigou, Jilin's Changbai Mountains, Guangdong's
Dinghu Mountains, Guizhou's Fanjing Mountains, Fujian's Wuyi Mountains,
Hubei's Shennongjia, Inner Mongolia's Xilingol, Xinjiang's Mt. Bogda,
Yunnan's Xishuangbanna, Jiangsu's Yancheng, Zhejiang's Tianmu Mountains
Nanji and Islands Guizhou's Maolan and Heilongjiang's Fenglin, have
joined the "International People and Bio-sphere Protection
Network." Heilongjiang's Zhalong, Jilin's Xianghai, Hunan's
Dongting Lake, Jiangxi's Poyang Lake, Qinghai's Bird Island, Hainan's
Dongzhai Harbor and Hong Kong's Mai Po have been included in the
listing of the world's important wetlands.
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| Northeast China Tiger. |
Crested cranes. |
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