Area 350 km² | Established 1978 | |
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Location Shaanxi Province, China |
Steppes panda in foping national nature reserve china
Foping Nature Reserve (simplified Chinese: 佛坪国家级自保护区; traditional Chinese: 佛坪國家級自保護區; pinyin: Fópíng guójiājí zì bǎohù qū; literally: "Foping National Level Nature Protection Area") in Shaanxi Province, China, is a nature reserve and national park situated in the Qinling Mountains. The Nature Reserve covers 350 km2 (140 sq mi) and is under the leadership of the Ministry of Forestry. Foping Nature Reserve is girdled by other protected areas: It is bordered in the east by the Long-caoping Forest Farm; in the west it is flanked by the Changqing Nature Reserve; Zhouzhi Nature Reserve, the stronghold of the Golden Monkey, and Laoxiancheng Nature Reserve are situated to the north. The Foping Reserve covers 29,240 hectares (72,300 acres) of rugged mountain terrain and is home to a stable panda population. Elevations range from 1,080 to 2,094 m with warm summers and cold winters. 950–1,200 mm of rain falls mostly from July to September, with snow at higher elevations. Forested lands dominate the reserve with a mix of conifers and broadleaf deciduous trees.
Contents
- Steppes panda in foping national nature reserve china
- Shaanxi foping national nature reserve china travel new links episode 30 bontv china
- History
- Roads
- Flora and fauna
- Giant panda population
- References
Shaanxi foping national nature reserve china travel new links episode 30 bontv china
History
The Foping Nature Reserve was set up in 1978 with a view to protecting the giant panda.
Roads
Roads end at the reserve edge to minimize human presence in the interior of the reserve.
Flora and fauna
Mammals found in the reserve include the giant panda, golden monkey, mainland serow, Chinese goral, dwarf musk deer, Asiatic black bear, and North-Chinese leopard. Also red and white giant flying squirrel lives in the reserve.
Giant panda population
The Foping National Natural Reserve supported a relatively stable population of about 64 pandas from 1974–1993 where they avoided people and lived in areas with bamboo growing well.