亚洲视频免费一区,国产欧美综合一区二区,亚洲国产观看,91精品啪在线观看国产91九色,日本又黄又粗暴的gif动态图含羞,麻豆国产一区二区在线观看,中文字幕在线二区

CHINA> Regional
Wild Indo-Chinese tiger spotted in SW China
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-02-23 20:51

KUNMING -- Chinese scientists in southwest China's Yunnan Province said Monday they had a photo of a wild Indo-Chinese tiger, the world's most critically endangered tiger subspecies.

Undated file photo shows two Indo-Chinese tigers. [Agencies]

The picture was taken in May 2007 by a researcher with an infrared camera in Xishuangbanna Nature Reserve, a mountainous border area straddling China and Myanmar, said a provincial forestry department official surnamed Huo.

At the time, scientists from the State Forestry Administration (SFA) and the provincial forestry department were on a 20-month field survey, he said.

"The research group found a large number of the tigers' footprints, feces, remains of prey and traces of other activity in the reserve," he said. "They also found bison, Sambar, barking deer, boar and other herbivorous animals that were part of the tigers' food chain."

Indo-Chinese tigers (Panthera tigris corbetti) are mainly found in Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Malaysia and southern China. Scientists estimate only 1,200 to 1,700 Indo-Chinese tigers are living in the wild.

Huo declined to give an estimate of the number of the tigers in Yunnan or the name of the researcher who took the photo.

"We have to wait for the final proof from the State Forestry Administration. Maybe in several weeks, we will release the investigation report with the estimated figure of the tigers," he said.

Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture, in the southernmost of Yunnan, has the best preserved tropical rain forests in China and has five state-level nature reserves.