BEIJING, Feb. 28 -- The first National Strategy for Plant Conservation was
unveiled on Tuesday as part of China's efforts to halt destruction of its flora
and fauna in the wake of rapid economic growth.
The strategy was devised by the State Forestry Administration (SFA), the
Chinese Academy of Sciences and the State Environmental Protection
Administration.
Taking four years to complete, the strategy sets out the current status of
plant conservation, problems to be addressed, and actions to be taken.
"The document is framed according to the 16 targets of the Global Strategy
for Plant Conservation, and will guide China's wild plant conservation and
management in the future," Jia Jiansheng, the SFA's deputy director, said.
The strategy aims to tackle China's plant conservation issue head-on and
fulfill its international obligations.
It focuses on four themes - understanding and documenting existing plant
diversity, conservation of plant diversity, sustainable use of wild plant
resources, and generating public awareness.
As one of the 187 signatory countries to the Convention on Biological
Diversity, China is one of the first countries to take concrete action.
The country has more than 30,000 species of vascular plants, about 10
percent of the world's total.
The number of endangered species has soared in the past 30 years due to
rapid economic development, increasing population and constant damage to the
environment.
Since 1992, the number of threatened plants has risen 10-fold with an
estimated 15 to 20 percent now at risk.
China plans to "effectively conserve" 90 percent of key wild plants through
State protection by 2010 - the same deadline for establishing a wild plant
monitoring system.
With a number of conservation model areas already developed, the strategy
will initially be implemented in these areas. This will be followed by a
nationwide survey of other plant species and habitats, and any new building or
industrial project will be subject to environmental scrutiny.
The construction of China's National Herbarium and development of a
herbaria network will also be accelerated.
Another network linking the country's 2,349 nature reserves is under review
to ensure full representation of all major ecological zones, especially deserts,
grasslands and wetlands.
China began setting up nature reserves in 1956, and in 1992, published its
first Red Data Book listing rare plant species. Those in danger of extinction
which were put under State control in 1999. In November 2006, a meeting in
Beijing of State officials, organized by Botanic Gardens Conservation
International, started drafting work on the current strategy.
(Source: China Daily)