A convoy of 21 vehicles left Xining, capital city of Qinghai
Province, on Friday for a scientific mission to the Hol Xil Nature
Reserve in northwest China's Qinghai Province.
This will be the country's largest scientific inspection of the
nature reserve since 1990, and also the first one since the opening
of the Qinghai-Tibet railway on July 1 this year.
The 61-person inspection team consists of scientists,
journalists and volunteers.
The 50-day mission's aim is to better understand the formation
of the Qinghai-Tibet plateau, its effect on China's and the world's
climate, as well as the distribution and migration of the nature
reserve's rare animals.
Hol Xil is home to Tibetan antelopes, an endangered species
which are protected by the Convention on the International
Trade.
The population of Tibetan antelopes has dropped from several
million to below 100,000 in the past two decades due to extensive
poaching and human encroachment of their habitat.
The team will also collect samples of the area's plants to
establish a gene databank and try to chart the area's ecological
and environment trends over the past 15 years, said the team's head
Ding Lin, a researcher with the Institute of Tibetan Plateau
Research of Chinese Academy of Sciences.
(Xinhua News Agency October 14, 2006)