The positive efforts made by the Tibet Autonomous Region
for ecological improvement and biodiversity protection in
the past five decades or more have been crowned with signal
success.
Natural grassland is rationally utilized and the active
grassland ecological protection is effective. Tibet contains
one of the five largest pasturelands in China. It has 82.07
million ha of natural grassland, representing about 21 percent
of the total natural grassland of the country and 68.11
percent of the total land area of Tibet. According to the
first national survey of grassland resources, the variety
of grassland in Tibet ranks first among all provinces and
autonomous regions. Of the 18 types of grassland in the
country, Tibet has 17. To protect the grassland ecology
is an important link in preserving a complete and orderly
chain of ecology on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
Though the grassland area in Tibet is very large, its carrying
capacity is low. Grassland overload was not significant
in the old days in Tibet, because of stagnant population
growth, frequent natural calamities, and massive human and
livestock deaths in times of snowstorms and other natural
disasters. Since the peaceful liberation of Tibet, the average
life-span of the local population has expanded remarkably,
the population has kept increasing, and as a result the
issue of insufficient grass to feed the ever-growing livestock
population has begun to appear. Consequently, to keep an
ecological balance on the pastureland has gradually become
a prominent problem. To ease the contradictions between
human beings and farm animals and between grass supply and
farm animals, Tibet has taken a succession of measures to
strengthen the rational utilization and ecological protection
of natural grassland. First, emphasis has been placed on
fencing and building water conservancy projects on natural
grassland, and raising both the output level of grassland
and its carrying capacity per unit area. Secondly, a pasture
responsibility system has been implemented. In line with
the principle of limiting the number of grazing animals
by the size of the pasture, rotation grazing periods, rotation
grazing areas and "no-grazing areas" have been
designated. Efforts have been made to increase the market
availability rate of the livestock and to effectively protect
natural pastures by strictly prohibiting over-grazing. Thirdly,
man-made grassland is being promoted so as to ease the pressure
brought to bear on natural grassland by the ever-growing
livestock population. Fourthly, efforts are being intensified
to prevent or control hazards caused by mice, insects and
poisonous weeds, and to maintain the natural ecological
balance of the grassland by utilizing scientific means,
and artificial and biological technologies. Fifthly, to
enhance grassland amelioration in the pastoral areas, change
the nomadic way of production, speed up economic development
in pastoral areas and improve herdsmen's living standards,
projects to construct grassland in the pastoral areas, build
permanent settlements for roving herdsmen, and restore and
improve natural grassland have been launched since 2001.
These measures not only have steadily raised the income
of farmers and herdsmen and enhanced their living standards,
but also ensured the sound development of the grassland
ecology.
Protecting natural forest resources, carrying out afforestation
and improving the ecological environment. Tibet boasts 7.17
million ha of forest, and the stocking volume has reached
2.091 billion cu m. Tibet has the largest primitive forest
in China. To protect Tibet's ecological environment, the
government exercises a "felling by quota" policy,
and strictly controls the scale of tree-felling in forests.
The annual felling amount for commercial purpose is limited
to 150,000 cu m. Simultaneously, a rotation system is in
place for lumbering bases so as to help restore vegetation.
A project for the protection of natural forest resources
on the upper reaches of the Yangtze River in Tibet, with
a total area of 31,000 sq km, has been implemented in the
three counties of Jomda, Gonjo and Markam that have a weighty
bearing on the ecology of the lower Yangtze valley. In 28
counties along the upper reaches of the Jinsha, Lancang
and Nujiang rivers and the catchment area of the Yarlungzangbo
River, where the hazards of sandstorm and soil erosion are
serious, a project to restore farmland to forest is being
undertaken, under which 52,000 ha of cultivated land will
be restored to forest and trees planted on 53,000 ha of
barren mountains and wasteland. By 2002, some 6,700 ha of
cultivated land had been restored to forest and 6,700 ha
of barren mountains and wasteland afforested. The government
is also striving to promote the development of energy substitutes
and fuel forests, and popularize solar energy in order to
protect natural bush vegetation.
It has become the conscious action of the Tibetan people
to join afforestation efforts. The government of the Tibet
Autonomous Region has formulated the "Forestation Plan
of the Tibet Autonomous Region" and the "Opinions
on Acceleration of Afforestation." The people of the
whole region are making efforts by starting with the improvement
of their living environments, first of all by greening their
courtyards, streets and urban environment in general, and
eventually building green belts in river catchment areas
where human activities are concentrated, and along major
highways. The results have been remarkable. According to
a survey, over the past 50-plus years some 70,000 ha of
land have been afforested in Tibet, 90 million trees have
been planted beside villages, houses, roads and waterways,
and 1.5 million cash trees have been grown.
Afforestation and ecological projects have been launched
steadily. Implementation of the key projects, such as the
afforestation project in Lhasa and its outskirts, the construction
of the shelter-forest system of the Yarlungzangbo River,
the pilot project of the Yangtze River shelter-forest system
in Markam and the pilot project for controlling sand by
afforestation in Xigaze, has, to a great extent, improved
the natural eco-environment of those localities. Since 1996,
the State has begun to build a shelter-forest system along
the upper and middle reaches of the Yangtze River. By 2000,
it had invested more than 3.7 million yuan in the project,
actively supporting Tibet in building man-made forests and
sealing off mountainous areas to facilitate afforestation
as appropriate to local conditions. The afforested area
has topped 13,000 ha, which, as a result, has played a positive
role in improving local residents' working and living conditions.
Following implementation of the project for the construction
of the shelter-forest system of the Yarlungzangbo River,
which is part of the key "three rivers" agricultural
development undertaking, a man-made forest belt measuring
several hundred km from Xigaze to Zetang on the upper reaches
of the Yarlungzangbo River has been formed. Now, a new spectacular
scene, the belt plays a positive role in conserving water
and topsoil along the Yarlungzangbo River.
Due to the effective protection of natural forest resources
and afforestation, the forest coverage in Tibet has kept
growing. It has grown from less than 1% in the 1950s to
5.93% today, and has played a positive role in improving
the Autonomous Region's ecological environment. According
to reports from relevant monitoring departments, due to
the increase in man-made vegetation, the number of sandstorm
days has decreased noticeably in Tibet. Currently, it is
32 days fewer in Lhasa, 34 days fewer in Xigaze and 32 days
fewer in Zetang, than 30 years ago.
Comprehensive control of soil erosion has brought noticeable
achievements. The Tibet Plateau belongs to the alpine cold
meadow and steppe landscape, which is characterized by poor
water and soil conservation and vulnerability to serious
soil erosion. Over the past 50 years, soil erosion has been
effectively controlled by afforestation and construction
of water conservancy projects. In recent years in particular,
the State and the Tibet Autonomous Region have increased
their investment in soil erosion control, which has yielded
highly desirable results. By the end of 2001, the State
had invested more than 36.8 million yuan in Tibet, built
53,000 ha of forests to conserve water and topsoil, grown
grass on 67,000 ha, harnessed soil erosion on 1,166 sq km,
and launched a comprehensive control project in the Radoigou
small catchment area in Quxu County, Lhasa, and implemented
comprehensive control projects for conserving water and
topsoil in Gyangze and Nyemo counties. Simultaneously, the
Tibet Autonomous Region has formulated the "Plan for
Conservation of Water and Topsoil in Tibet" and several
other plans in respect of water and soil conservation and
soil erosion control, promulgated the "Measures of
Administration for Water and Soil Conservation Projects
in the Tibet Autonomous Region," and made prevention,
supervision and protection the top priority of the water
and soil conservation work, in order to prevent new soil
erosion caused by human activities. To enable the comprehensive
control of soil erosion to be carried out in a more scientific
way, the Tibet Autonomous Region launched, in 2001, the
construction of a water and soil conservation monitoring
network with an investment of more than 60 million yuan
to provide overall monitoring for soil erosion across Tibet.
Achievements have been made in desertification prevention
and control. Sandstorms have afflicted Tibet throughout
its history. Now, as a result of the expansion of the hole
in the ozone layer caused by global warming, Tibet has been
facing problems of rising snowlines, dried-up lakes, and
deteriorated grassland in recent years. In some areas in
Tibet, pastureland has suffered a natural deterioration,
and some of it has been reduced to sand and stone. To control
pastureland deterioration and desertification, Tibet has
begun to improve the environment of its rivers, with the
emphasis on improving small river valleys and the desertification
of deteriorated pastureland. With the goal of establishing
a relatively good ecological system of forestry and grassland,
Tibet has adopted measures consisting of afforestation,
aerial sowing and closing off hillsides to facilitate afforestation.
It has planted trees, bushes and grass on a large scale
near rivers and in areas that have been hit most seriously
by pastureland deterioration and desertification. Projects
to protect the natural forests and wetlands, and to reconvert
farmland into forest or pasture have been carried out on
the upper reaches of the Yangtze River. In 2002, the goal
was to reconvert some 13,000 ha of farmland into forest.
The Central Government provided 10 million yuan as subsidy
for seedlings, and 15 million kg of grain and two million
yuan as allowance for families of farmers and herdsmen whose
farmland had been restored to forest. Trees were planted
in the vicinity of Lhasa, and in important agricultural
areas forest shelter belts were built around the fields
to reduce soil erosion by sand. These measures have brought
the ever-expanding desertification threat under control.
Great progress has been made in protection of biodiversity.
Tibet is one of the most typically biodiverse regions in
the world. It is an important gene pool for the biodiversity
of the globe. At present, there are over 9,600 wild plants
in Tibet, 39 of which are listed in the Convention on International
Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora and
are under special State protection as rare and endangered
species. There are 798 species of vertebrates and nearly
4,000 species of insects in Tibet, 125 of which are under
special State protection, accounting for more than one third
of the wild animals under special State protection. Approximately
600 species of higher plants and more than 200 species of
terrestrial vertebrates are endemic to the Qinghai-Tibet
Plateau.
Over the past 50-plus years, the Central Government and
the Tibetan local government have conducted extensive surveys
on Tibet's biological resources. They have worked out scientific
plans and programs for the protection of wild animals and
plants. They have also adopted a sequence of measures for
effective protection of the rare and endangered species.
In accordance with the relevant State laws and regulations,
the Tibet Autonomous Region has established forest law enforcement
organs and the Tibet Armed Police Forestry Contingent. They
have conducted the "Hohxil Action Number One"
and other special campaigns in the border areas of Qinghai,
Xinjiang and Tibet to protect the Tibetan antelope and other
rare animals. These campaigns have dealt a heavy blow to
poachers and curbed law-violation activities that have done
damage to wild animal resources. Meanwhile, the State has
invested millions of yuan each year in infrastructure facilities
for forest security and forest fire prevention in Tibet.
In 2002, the State set aside 3.66 million yuan from its
national debt revenue for a special project aimed at cracking
down on poachers of Tibetan antelopes. It has also strengthened
publicity on the protection of wild animals. Now people
in Tibet are highly conscious of the importance of protecting
wild animals, and the once rampant hunting of Tibetan antelopes
has been brought under control.
Over the past 50 years or more, not one species in Tibet
has suffered extinction. Biodiversity is effectively maintained,
and biological types are continuously enriched. Red deer,
generally considered by the international animal research
community to have vanished in the 20th century, were discovered
again in Tibet in the 1990s, and their numbers are increasing.
As Tibet opens wider to the outside world, non-native creatures
such as carp, crucian carp, eel and loach, high-productivity
and quality cattle, sheep, pigs, chicken, ducks, as well
as corn, watermelons and vegetables have been introduced
from the inland areas to Tibet, where they are thriving
today.
Great achievements have been made in the establishment of
nature reserves. Establishing nature reserves is an important
method used by Tibet to strengthen ecological improvement
and environmental protection work and implement the strategy
of sustainable development. Since the 1980s, Tibet has established
more than 70 nature reserves of different types. Of these,
three are on the national level (four more national-level
nature reserves are being planned) and 15 are on the autonomous
region (provincial) level. The total area of the 18 nature
reserves is 401,000 sq km, accounting for 33.4% of the land
area of Tibet and 30.8% of the total area of China's nature
reserves. In addition, prefectures and prefecture-level
cities in Tibet have established over 50 nature reserves
of the corresponding level. A rationally distributed nature
protection network of different types is basically in place.
In light of the general program and requirements of the
State, the People's Government of the Tibet Autonomous Region
is carrying out the "Development Plan for Nature Reserves
in the Tibet Autonomous Region for 1996-2010." It is
expected that 28 new nature reserves at or above the autonomous
region level will be established before 2010. By then, all
types of nature reserves other than sea and seashore ecosystem
ones will be found in Tibet.
In order to restore the natural ecosystem, human activities
such as economic development are strictly limited in the
established nature reserves. As a result, the ecological
environment in most of the nature reserves has become stable
and the prospects are quite good. Breeding grounds, habitats
and important ecosystems for rare and endangered species,
important wetlands for migratory birds, as well as the natural
landscapes, geological sites and biological sites of scientific
importance are now well protected. All the 125 wild animals,
39 wild plants and typical geological features in Tibet
that are on the State protection list are well preserved
in the established nature reserves. The Tibet Autonomous
Region has more than six million ha of wetland, accounting
for about 4.9% of Tibet's total land area and ranking first
in China. Its alpine wetlands are unique in the world. According
to monitoring by the relevant departments, the number of
both wild animals and plants in the nature reserves is obviously
increasing, and the total reserves of wild animal resources
have increased by upwards of 30%. Rare animals that had
not been seen for many years have returned to their habitats.
In the Changtang Nature Reserve, monitoring in the past
few years has revealed that the numbers of wild animals
such as Tibetan wild donkey, argali and antelope have increased
to differing degrees. The number of Tibetan antelopes has
reached 40,000 to 50,000 in the Nyima central reserve. After
a nature reserve for black-necked cranes was established
on the middle reaches of the Yarlungzangbo River, the number
of black-necked cranes wintering there has increased each
year, accounting for about 80% of the earth's total number
of black-necked cranes.