23/12/2005
- Washington, DC – This month marks WWF's 25th anniversary
of wild panda conservation in China. On December 23, 1980,
WWF and Chinese researchers headed into the cold mountains
of southwestern China to conduct the first-ever intensive
research programme on wild pandas, their habitat and their
behaviour. A quarter century of work moved giant pandas
from the brink of extinction to a solid foundation for survival
if conservation efforts continue. According
to the results of a survey conducted by WWF and China's
State Forestry Administration, there are nearly 1,600
pandas in the wild, over 40 per cent more animals than
previously thought to exist. The last panda survey in
the 1980s found around 1,100 giant pandas in the wild.
“Contrary to popular myth, wild panda
conservation is really about saving their forest homes,
not improving their breeding,” said Karen Baragona, head
of the Species Conservation Programme at WWF-US. “We are
making sure that pandas have a safe and healthy place
to live.”
Protecting panda habitat means protecting
some of the richest temperate forests on Earth that shelter
more than 100 other mammals, 250 bird species, and thousands
of other animals as well as the water supply for 400 million
Chinese people.
“The most pressing threat to wild
pandas is habitat fragmentation from economic development
activities like road construction and timber extraction,”
said Baragona.
Across the panda's range, habitat
is fragmented into many isolated patches — some just narrow
belts of bamboo 1,000–1,200m in width. Within these patches,
a network of some 60 nature reserves protects nearly half
of the panda's habitat. Small, isolated populations have
less flexibility to find new feeding areas during periodic
bamboo die-offs. WWF works with the Chinese government
to reduce threats to panda habitat, restore forests and
reconnect isolated patches by establishing new panda reserves
in critical corridor areas.
Protecting panda habitat sometimes
requires unusual efforts. Communities living on the outskirts
of panda reserves often extract fuelwood — illegally but
of necessity — from inside the reserves, amounting to
about three tons a year per household. In several pilot
sites, WWF has offered farmers energy efficient stoves
fueled by manure. Reconfigured pig sties and restrooms
capture waste in a reactor tank and the gas produced in
the tank is fed to stoves for cooking. With waste from
just two pigs, a family can cook three times a day for
at least ten months of the year without taking fuelwood
from surrounding forests. People are happy with the arrangement
because it saves the time and effort of collecting fuelwood,
their food cooks faster, and odor and insects have been
virtually eliminated from pig sties and toilets. Now the
provincial government is considering subsidizing widespread
conversion to biogas stoves.
WWF became the first global conservation
organization to work in China and opened the door to new
conservation opportunities that benefit wildlife, places
and people in the world’s most populated and fastest growing
nation.
Over the past twenty-five years, WWF
achieved numerous conservation successes in China — from
laying the foundation for a scientific panda conservation
plan to bringing Pere David’s Deer back home to protecting
millions of hectares of critical wetlands under the Ramsar
Convention.
Small conservation achievements underlay
larger ones. For example, WWF helped local villagers make
and oversee plans for restoring reclaimed farmland to
its former wetland state near Dongting Lake in Hunan Province.
Villagers also participated in developing alternative
livelihoods compatible with wetland conservation, establishing
fish breeding and eco-agriculture associations. Over the
course of this WWF restoration project, household incomes
increased fivefold.
But, there are many challenges to
building a sustainable future for China. WWF is still
working to halt biodiversity loss in China, stop the degradation
of freshwater systems and water quality, and build a culture
of sustainability among other efforts. |