BEIJING, July 28 -- About 35 pandas at a reserve
in southwestern China face an uncertain future after nearly a quarter of their
habitat was destroyed by last year's earthquake, according to a study published
on Monday.
Large parts of Sichuan Province - where most of the
world's remaining wild pandas live - were devastated by the May 12 earthquake,
which sent landslides crashing into river valleys.
The landslides and mud flows destroyed 23 percent of
the panda's habitat in the south Minshan mountain region and the remaining
bamboo-rich land was left fragmented, potentially threatening the pandas' way of
life, said Xu Weihua, the study's lead author and an ecologist with the Chinese
Academy of Sciences.
"The Minshan mountains were the hardest-hit habitat
during the earthquake and the isolation of the pandas into small groups caused
by land fragmentation spells trouble for its inhabitants," said Xu.
"Such isolation could lead to the risk of their
extinction caused by inbreeding," he said. The last count of pandas in the area
in 2001 found just 35 of them.
The study called for more conservation in the
remaining habitat areas and the creation of corridors that would link the
fragmented areas and allow the pandas to interact more.
The south Minshan mountain region, where the edge of
the Chengdu basin meets the edge of the Tibetan plateau, is home to four nature
reserves.
Researchers do not know how the pandas mentioned in
the study are coping with the recent changes in their environment, said Lu Zhi,
a panda expert and director of the Center for Nature and Society at Peking
University.
"We know that the Minshan mountains were one of the
hardest-hit panda habitats during the earthquake, but we really have no idea how
these pandas reacted to the earthquake," Lu said.
"Pandas prefer gentler slopes, so what's left of this
steep region is not conducive to their natural preferences and could affect
their survival," she said.
Pandas already are threatened by loss of habitat,
poaching and a low reproduction rate.
Only about 1,600 pandas live in the wild, mostly in
Sichuan Province.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)