<acronym id="siyyr"><label id="siyyr"><menu id="siyyr"></menu></label></acronym>

        <p id="siyyr"></p>

      1. <table id="siyyr"><ruby id="siyyr"></ruby></table>
      2. <acronym id="siyyr"><label id="siyyr"></label></acronym>
        <acronym id="siyyr"><label id="siyyr"></label></acronym>

        <table id="siyyr"></table>
        LOGIN | MEMBER | SITEMAP | CONTACT US
         
        About Taiwan
        Political System & State Organs
        Administrative
        Divisions
        People's Livelihood
          Diplomacy
          Human Rights
          Sports
          Land & Resources
        Environmental
        Protection
        China & the World Organization
          History
        Splendid
        Civilization
          Religions
        Archaeological Discoveries
        Eco-park for giant pandas to be completed at year-end
           晩豚:2004-03-26 14:09        ン: system        輳苅

          China is expected to have its first ecological park for giant pandas at the end of this year, according to researchers at the Chengdu Giant Panda Breeding and Research Base in this capital city of southwest China's Sichuan Province.
        The park is to be built to expand the existing breeding and research base by five times, the researchers said.
        The 200-hectare park will be used to make specialized research on the conditions and methods for returning artificially-bred giant pandas to the wild.
        At the northern part of the park, there will be a 60-hectare transition pilot zone, in which lakes, brooks, ornamental plants and grassland will be arranged to create imitated wild conditions of the natural habitat for pandas, according to the overall design of the park.
        Edible bamboo will be grown in the zone for pandas to hunt for food and co-inhabit with red pandas.
        Another pilot zone covering a total area of 134 hectares will be established at the northwestern part of the park, in which imitated beast caves will be built for the pandas and observation towers and field work stations will be installed.
        Artificial breeding of giant pandas aims at eventually expanding their population in the wild, said Yu Jianqiu, deputy director of the Chengdu Giant Panda Breeding and Research Base.
        "Meanwhile, the ecological park will help people to know more about giant pandas and therefore better protect the rare species," Yu added.
        Founded in 1987, the Chengdu Giant Panda Breeding and Research Base has 42 pandas in captivity.
        An endangered species, the giant panda is called a "living fossil." The world's total population of wild giant pandas stands at about 1,000, which are mainly distributed in Sichuan and Shaanxi provinces of China.
        Currently, about 160 giant pandas are kept in captivity in the world.
         

          臥心/l燕u
         

        <acronym id="siyyr"><label id="siyyr"><menu id="siyyr"></menu></label></acronym>

            o鮪}猟n
            Advertising | Sitemap | Help | About Us
            Copyright Chinataiwan.org .All Rights Reserved
            A级毛片成人网站_中国女人熟毛茸茸A毛片_亚洲欧美曰本中文字不卡_菠萝蜜在线视频一区二区欧美
            <p id="siyyr"></p>

          1. <table id="siyyr"><ruby id="siyyr"></ruby></table>
          2. <acronym id="siyyr"><label id="siyyr"></label></acronym>
            <acronym id="siyyr"><label id="siyyr"></label></acronym>

            <table id="siyyr"></table>