e05.gif (2790 ×Ö½Ú)
  western exploitation

W T O

travel & environment scientific & information culture & education news & policy
  international trade military & aviation agriculture & industry finance & investment medicine & hygiene city & construction
News & Policy
White house confirms Chinese Vice-premier Qian Qichen to visit
Chinese Minister promises to break more monopolies
China blazes trails in saving endangered tigers
Chinese Pilgrims Safe at Mecca, Ready to Return
Jiang Zemin Meets CPPCC National Committee Members from Hong Kong and Macao
GDP growth to be around 7%
China Opposes "Confederation" System in Solving Taiwan Issue: Spokesman
Economy focus of CPPCC session
Major Congress quotes from Chinese premier
Zhu Calls for Closer Sino-Japanese Economic Cooperation
First Mainland Resident Journalists Arrive in Taiwan
Manila claims no change in one-China policy
China to down size bureaucracy
US donates 100,000 dollars to snow-hit Inner Mongolia
Senior Official on Party Building in Rural Areas
Chinese defense minister to visit four Asian nations
Quake experts head for quake-hit India
Over 500,000 Hong Kong people Visit Mainland Regularly
Zhu Calls for Cooperation on Human Trafficking
China's Fund Market Performs Actively on Tuesday
Chinese Banks Keep Payroll of Public Servants
China Restores Smaller Sized Yuanmingyuan
China envoy urges dialogue with Taiwan
An Exploration of Yanwa Cave
Most China Urban Residents Optimistic About US Passing PNTR
Seeing is believing
Changing Times Challenge Army-demobilizing System
No Big CIH Attacks Reported in China
Tibetan Customs Respected and Protected
Tibet to Focus on 100 Small Towns to Expedite Urbanization
Shanghai Opens New Sea Routes to Japan, U.S.
China-US East Coast Shipping Line Opened in Shanghai
China to Upgrade Railway System
50 Years of Progress in China's Human Rights













































¡¡

¡¡

China blazes trails in saving endangered tigers


Through decades of efforts, Chinese zoologists have mastered effective techniques for artificially breeding South China tigers, bringing new hope to the protection and survival of the endangered species.

Fewer than 80 worldwide, the tiger's extinction was seen as "inevitable" by many scientists years ago, because of breeding taboos and the difficulties involved. Moreover, the extremely limited number made the animal species face the fate of dinosaur, they warned.

So far, only 57 South China tigers are alive in captivity in the world, and none of the animals have been captured alive over the past 40 years.

To save the fierce yet beautiful cats, China began to breed the tigers through artificial breeding in 1963, and the Qianling Zoo in Guiyang, capital of southwest China's Guizhou Province, was the first to achieve success in the field.

The Suzhou Zoo, in east China's Jiangsu Province, is taking a leading position in breeding tigers both at home and abroad. It has bred 70 tigers since 1988 and 37 survived, the highest survival rate in the world.

Four decades ago, people didn't care much about artificial breeding of the mammal, because there were over 4,000 wild tigers roaming amidst the forests in south China.

Later, Chinese experts had to find a way of breeding the tiger, as its number saw a rapid decline due to narrower and deteriorating habitats.

Huang Gongqing, an experienced expert at the Suzhou Zoo, and his assistants pioneered in breeding and taking care of South China tigers.

For a higher survival rate, the experts did research in a variety of subjects of zoology, physiology, toxicology, histophysiology, embryology, tocology, nutriology, immunology, ecology and environmental hygiene.

Scientific breeding diet suitable to various location is worked out by the experts, according to temperature changes, tigers' appetite and different fertility stages of female tigers.

"The tigers can grow fast and strong only when the feeder knows when and how much the tigers need to eat beef, rabbits, chicken, eggs, meat gruel, vitamins and microelements," Huang said.

It is a vital factor to prevent and avoid harm to the tigers by ecological cause in artificial feeding, according to the experts. They attached great importance to environmental hygiene, assuring a safe, comfortable and sanitary residence in seasons.

The tigers' rooms were all air-conditioned to keep indoor temperature at 20 degrees Celsius at which tigers feel most comfortable. Regular prevention work was staged to extirpate parasites inside and outside the rooms.

Wired video monitoring system were installed to keep watch on the tigers in case of a contingency and human-care service was at work day and night.

The experts accumulated rich experience in breeding a breeder tiger from the beginning when it is only a zygote. Mother tigers, who are pregnant or in their breast-feeding period are adequately fed with nutritious food to guarantee embryo's good development or cub tigers having a sufficient amount of milk.

If a mother tiger suffers insufficient lactation, artificial nursing will be taken to make sure cub tigers' growth and the mother tiger's health.

The tigers' daily information were observed and recorded for further research, including body temperature, mood, respiration, appetite, excrement, urine, and walking pace. Special attention was paid to female tigers during mating or pregnancy periods.

For first-hand information, the experts assumed 24-hour monitoring over mother tigers in process of delivery and 15 days after giving birth.

The Suzhou Zoo's successful experience helped other tiger breeders in China.

Out of the 57 live tigers in the country's zoos, 30 were born in the Suzhou zoo and the rest were bred by zoos across China. The Shanghai zoo alone has bred 18 tigers since the late 1980s.

To protect South China tigers, the Ministry of Construction has announced rules governing feeding, management, propagation and breeding of the endangered species.

(Xinhua)


¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

Copyright © 1998~2001 China Detective site.
All rights reserved.
To comment on this site
£¬E-mail : 007@c007.com

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡

¡¡