Latest News:  

English>>China Society

Bee reserve stings planned tiger reserve

(Xinhua)

20:23, July 29, 2013

HARBIN, July 29 (Xinhua) -- Plans for a Siberian tiger reserve in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province have hit a snag, as the reserve could pose a threat to the booming local bee-keeping industry, local forestry authorities said.

With the number of Siberian tigers in Russia approaching saturation in recent years, wild tigers have tended to migrate to northeastern provinces in China, where the environmental conditions are favorable for the tigers, according to monitoring results from both countries.

China and Russia are cooperating on the construction of a cross-border eco-passage for Siberian tigers that would connect planned tiger reserves in the two countries and expand the wild Siberian tigers' habitats so that they can migrate freely, without border restrictions.

The Siberian tiger reserves are expected to be built in Russia's Far East Primorsky Territory and a forest in the eastern part of the Wanda Mountains in China's Heilongjiang Province, according to the plan.

However, in China, the plan is not going ahead smoothly.

The planned Siberian tiger reserve in Heilongjiang Province is scheduled to cover 202,000 hectares. Of the total, 94 percent of the tiger reserve, or 190,300 hectares, will overlap a black bee nature reserve in the region, according to sources with the province's Dongfanghong Forestry Bureau.

Covering about 1.22 million hectares, the black bee nature reserve, located in Raohe County, Shuangyashan City, was developed as a state-level nature reserve in 1997 in a bid to protect the area's black bees and nectar-secreting plants.

If the Siberian tiger reserve is built, the black bee nature reserve would have to turn over about 15.5 percent of its total area to the tiger reserve, as the two reserves can not coexist, the sources said.

Zhang Shusen, director of the wildlife protection department of the Heilongjiang Provincial Forest Industry Bureau, said the Siberian tiger reserve has to push to get some land from the black bee nature reserve, because it is unlikely that the planned cross-border eco-passage for Siberian tigers can be changed.

However, the black bee nature reserve authorities have refused to give up any land for the Siberian tiger reserve.

Li Changchun, deputy director of the management bureau of the black bee nature reserve, said he is unwilling to reduce the size of the black bee nature reserve, even though he supports the construction of the Siberian tiger reserve.


【1】 【2】



We Recommend:

Teenage crash victims were talented students

What did eco-migration bring to rural residents

Hard working people under the sweltering sun

Cute twin sisters popular on the Internet

Keep the childlike innocence

Marriage made in fairs by anxiety parents

Top 10 beautiful small cities in China

China's weekly story (2013.6.28-7.5)

Rainstorms batter SW China quake-hit regions

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:LiQian、Gao Yinan)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. APF officers and men in actual-combat drill

  2. Soldiers leave for "Peace Mission 2013" drills

  3. DPRK marks 60th anniv. of armistice

  4. 37th anniversary of Tangshan earthquake

  5. Heat waves scorch many parts of China

  6. The hard life of a single father

  7. China beats Australia 4-3 in East Asian Cup

  8. Celebrity breakups

  9. Alibaba, e-concierge, soon at your service

  10. Cheap drug expected after GSK case

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. China's economy will continue to prosper
  2. Western countries face dilemma on Syrian conflict
  3. Reform, not incentives, to drive expansion
  4. Lenovo reigns as king of the hill
  5. Small exporters need more help to pass tough times
  6. Debate on internationalizing education
  7. Bo Xilai indicted for corruption
  8. China rules out provisional economic stimulus plan
  9. Removal of deposit rate ceiling not imminent
  10. Feeble Japanese-Philippine 'axis' doomed

What’s happening in China

Singer in spotlight after blog post

  1. Vietnamese brides popular in Henan township
  2. Authorities to probe 'fraud' celebrity master
  3. Homesexuals meet on lifestyle
  4. Asiana crash victims' ashes returned to relatives
  5. Drought continues to linger in Hunan