9-4 Establishment of A Biodiversity
Network and Conservation of Endangered Species
Project Scope and Relationship to China's Agenda
21
This project seeks to establish a national network
of natural reserves and the off-site conservation of rare and endangered
species, conservation of special habitats and ecosystems, and coordinating
conservation needs with the sustainable use of living resources. This project
is developed in accordance with Chapter 15 of China's Agenda 21 and is also
related to programme areas 6B, 6C, 6D, and 20E.
1. Background
China's flora and fauna ranks among the most diverse
in the world. Its vast territory and its diverse geographical conditions
have resulted in the formation and development of a multitude of ecosystems.
There are about 30,000 species of higher plants in China, accounting for
over 10 percent of the total higher plant species in the world. Among these,
nearly 200 genera are endemic to China. Furthermore, China's reptiles, birds,
mammals, and amphibians are estimated to be about 10 percent of the world's
total. China also has reserves for a number of endemic rare species such
as the giant panda, the snub-nosed monkey, and the Yangtze River dolphin.
However, China's high population and the increasing
demand on resources brought about by economic development are placing an
escalating stress on natural ecosystems and biodiversity. The strengthening
of China's biodiversity conservation network is therefore an urgent task
for the conservation of China's biodiversity.
To establish this network, effective information
on biodiversity is crucial. Existing biodiversity and ecological monitoring
networks belonging to different fields or sectors need to be coordinated
and organized so that decision-makers can obtain integrated biodiversity
information and relevant ecological data at the national level. Analysis
of this information will provide sound advice for the Chinese government
to make decisions on key issues on biodiversity conservation and sustainable
development. With the support of UNDP, based on a GEF project, China has
prepared the Chinese Biodiversity Protection Action Plan. However, its implementation
is short of financial and human resources.
2.Objectives
Long-term Objectives
- To establish an effective national network of
protected areas for conservation of species and ecosystem biodiversity,
to prepare an inventory of China's biological diversity, and to formulate
strategies for the protection of biological resources and their sustainable
utilization.
Immediate Objectives
- To formulate the relevant programs, principles,
standards, and policies for biodiversity conservation.
- To establish and improve the network of national
protected areas, and to formulate management systems for these protected
areas based upon international biodiversity conservation requirements and
the needs of sustainable development.
- To establish monitoring stations to obtain data
on environment-economy interactions as the basis for protection and sustainable
management of ecosystems and species.
- To prepare an inventory of the rare and endangered
plant species of China, to prioritize the need for the protection of species
and ecosystems, and to continue the compilation of the Red Book of Plants
and Animals in China.
- To develop new ways of coordinating the conservation
of biodiversity with the sustainable utilization of biological resources;
to establish demonstration projects that consider both the protection of
biological resources and their sustainable utilization on different levels
such as species, protected reserves, and ecosystems.
3. Activities
The implementing agencies for the project will
be National Environmental Protection Agency, the Ministry of Forestry, the
Ministry of Agriculture, the Chinese Academy of Sciences and relevant agencies.
The executing agencies will be the State Planning Commission and the State
Science and Technology Commission.
3.1 Draft the programs, principles, standards,
and policies, including:
- Division of Chinese biogeography
- - Methods and standards of ranking units for
division of Chinese biogeography
- Geographical distribution (species, populations, communities, ecosystems
and landscapes) of Chinese biodiversity and its trait analysis
- The larger districts of Chinese biogeography and their division
- The division of Chinese protected reserves;
- Chinese natural reserves programme
- - Types of natural protected reserves and their
regional distribution
- Priority ranking of the protection of species and their habitats and
a list of candidate natural reserves
- Prepare 10-year (2000-2009) and 20-year (2000-2019) development programmes
of the Chinese natural reserves
- The financial requirements (investment, grants, etc.) for the establishment
of natural reserves;
- Standards and programmes for the conservation
of biodiversity in China
- - Programs for establishment of natural reserves
- Principles for natural protected reserves ranking and classification;
- Natural protected reserves management guide
- Standards for ecological monitoring of natural protected reserves
- Identification of effective structures and operational systems
- Establishment and management principles for the species breeding centre;
- Legislation for biodiversity conservation
- - Regulations for natural reserves
- Rare and endangered species protection law
- Biodiversity conservation law.
The duration of the activity will be three years.
3.2 Establish a monitoring network for biodiversity.
Choose typical ecosystems as biodiversity investigation
sites, and establish micro- or meso-scale biodiversity monitoring regions.
Aerial and satellite photographs, ground investigation data, and the application
of a Geographical Information System (GIS) will be the main tools for regional
monitoring.
The proposed network will include thirty bases
in such regions as: cold temperate coniferous forest region, subtropical
broad-leaved evergreen forest region, tropical seasonal rainforest, typical
rain forest region, Qinghai-Xizang (Tibet) Plateau, marine and coastal zones,
etc..
The duration of the activity will be twelve years.
3.3 Establish the Chinese Biodiversity Information
System.
- Biodiversity database, including databases of
species inventory, protected species, nature reserves, ecosystems, domesticated
animals, cultivated plants and their wild relatives.
- Biodiversity model database, including the spatial
and temporal dynamic models of endangered species and populations; the
dynamic models of the key ecosystems; and other models related to the protection,
management and sustainable utilization of biodiversity.
- Biodiversity Expert System Database, including
biodiversity conservation knowledge database, and the expert system for
the protection and sustainable use of biodiversity.
The duration of the activity will be four years.
3.4 Establishment of demonstration projects and
the corresponding technologies for the conservation and sustainable use
of biodiversity. These activities will attempt to implement the principles
and programmes outlined in activities 3.1 to 3.3 above to serve as demonstration
for extension and capacity building activities in project areas.
- Investigation of the status of rare and endangered
species and demonstration projects for the sustainable use of biodiversity.
- Establishment of nature reserves demonstration
models for the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.
- Establishment of demonstration nature reserves,
including wetland, forest, grassland, and marine ecosystems, emphasizing
rational exploitation and utilization of biological resources.
The duration of the activity will be six years.
4. Input
4.1 Chinese inputs
The total investment from China is US$ 11.90 million,
and includes:
- The personnel and facilities of the ecosystem
monitoring network, and the further improvement of monitoring facilities;
- The information processing facilities such as
computers, and the establishment of communication facilities for data and
information networks;
- The present personnel and facilities of the botanical
gardens, cell banks, gene banks, germplasm banks and wildlife breeding
centres;
- National Laboratories, scientists and facilities
of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the National Environmental Protection
Agency, and other related institutions.
4.2 Internatinonal Cooperation
- Foreign experts which will be invited during
the implementation of the project.
- Workshops and/or project-related meetings which
will be held every year.
- Data and information processing facilities.
- Monitoring and information network facilities.
- Upgrading and improvement of equipment and other
facilities of ecological and environmental monitoring stations.
- Transportation and communications expenses for
field surveys and investigations.
4.3 Budget
The implementation of this project will require
a total foreign investment of US$ 8.1 million, of which $ 5.3 million will
be from international aid, and the $3.8 million from soft loans.
Budget (in million US dollars)
Activity  |
Chinese Input  |
External Input
Grant Soft-loan  |
Total  |
| 3.1 |
1.0 |
1.0  |
2.0 |
| 3.2 |
3.0 |
0.6 1.4  |
5.0 |
| 3.3 |
3.0 |
0.6 1.4  |
5.0 |
| 3.4 |
4.9 |
3.1 1.0  |
9.0 |
| Total |
11.9 |
5.3 3.8  |
21.0 |
5. Benefits
This project will help to build capacity in biodiversity
conservation and sustainable development and will contribute to local, national
and global efforts. A high-level monitoring and information processing network
of ecosystems and biodiversity will be established to:
- Use multi-disciplinary approaches to enhance
China's ability to monitor and analyze major environmental issues, provide
decision-makers with appropriate countermeasures to deal with the changes
of biodiversity and ecosystems, and produce direct and long-term benefits
that promote the harmonious development of the environment and the economy;
- Establish a natural reserve network will greatly
improve China's biodiversity conservation. Implementation of this project
will help train many senior experts and administrative personnel who will
then have the capability of dealing with the conservation and management
of biodiversity and ecosystems at the community, county, and national levels.
Text Browser Utilities: [Back, ACCA21 Home]

For more information about ACCA21
contact:
web@acca21.edu.cn
Address: 109 Wanquanhe Road, Haidian District, Beijing 100089, People's
Republic of China
Telephone: +86-10-82636193, +86-10-82634400 Ext.2401
Fax: +86-10-82636192
|