The number of Tibetan antelopes has been on the rise in certain
regions of China thanks to the efforts made by China and the
international community to protect the endangered species.
This has been a common consensus of zoologists attending a
coordination meeting on the protection of Tibetan antelopes, which
was co-sponsored by the Xinjing
Uygur Autonomous Region, Qinghai
Province and the Tibet
Autonomous Region in Urumqi, capital of Xinjiang, on
Saturday.
China now has at least 100,000 Tibetan antelopes, much higher
than the 75,000 antelopes announced in 1999, and the number of the
animal has been on the rise, Zhang Li, the Chinese representative
for the International Fund for Animal Welfare, told the
meeting.
The increase in the number of Tibetan antelopes is attributed to
the cooperation with the international community and great efforts
the Chinese government has made to protect the rare species, said
Fan Zhiyong, head of the China Animal Import and Export Office.
Currently, China has established five state-level protection
zones for Tibetan antelopes in Xinjiang, Tibet and Qinghai.
The Tibetan antelope is a kind of rare animal species native to
China, which lives in the highlands of Xinjiang, Qinghai and Tibet
and there is a small number of the antelopes living in India.
Historical materials show that the number of the antelopes once
reached a record one million in history, but in the last 20 years
of the 20th century, the number of the antelopes dropped
drastically due to excessive poaching.
The Tibetan antelope has been put under state key protection in
China and has been put on the appendix protection list of the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild
Fauna and Flora.
(Xinhua News Agency August 21, 2005)