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According to the second giant panda national survey, there
are some 1,100 pandas distributed wildly in 34 counties in
Sichuan, Shaanxi and Gansu provinces. So, it is extremely
important to protect the wild population and their habitats.
From the first four nature reserves established in 1963, 34
reserves for the giant panda have been established, covering
an area of 1.76 million hectares, or 4.35 million acres.
The wild panda population has been effectively protected,
laying a solid foundation for their protection.
In the 1970s and 1980s, large areas of bamboo flowered and
withered away, seriously threatening the wild population of
giant pandas. To conserve and improve the habitat situation,
as well as stabilize and develop the wild population of giant
pandas, the Chinese government ratified and launched a 'Conservation
Project of the Giant Panda and Its Habitat' in 1992. It involved
an area covering 34 counties in the three provinces of Sichuan,
Shaanxi and Gansu. Except further upgrading the already established
13 reserves, another 14 reserves, 17 corridor belts for giant
panda and 32 habitat administrative stations were planned
to be built to ensure gene exchanges among the wild populations.
Governments at different levels have closely cooperated with
international organizations to promote community support projects
in the nature reserves. The community co-management method
was adopted, through which panda protection and the economy
of the local community were jointly improved, and the relationship
between nature reserves and local governments were harmonized.
Among all the nature reserves for the giant panda, Wolong
is the most famous, being the earliest and largest. Located
in Wenchuan County, Sichuan Province, and covering an area
of 200,000 hectares (494,200 acres), the Wolong Nature Reserve
is a key nature preservation area designed primarily for the
protection and reproduction of giant pandas. Lying on the
complicated land formations of the transitional area between
the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and the Sichuan Basin, the highland
reserve is endowed with favorable environmental conditions
for preservation and reproduction of not only the giant panda
but also other wild animals. With about 100 wild giant pandas
living in it, the reserve is called "the home of the
giant panda" or "gene pool" and "natural
garden of animals and plants."
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