China's Hainan records new plant species
A newly recorded plant species, Thismia tentaculata K. Larsen & Aver., was discovered in south China's Hainan Province on June 2. This marks the first time that the plant species was recorded on the Chinese mainland.
Wang Jiaren, a forest ranger from the Wuzhishan branch of the management bureau of the Hainan Tropical Rainforest National Park, found over 20 samples of the species in a rubber forest of the Wuzhishan section of the national park. The discovery of the plant species indicates a sound ecological environment.
Over 200 forest rangers like Wang work in the Wuzhishan section of the national park. Their duties involve patrols of the forest, fire prevention, and taking photos of animals and plants for researchers.
The Hainan tropical rainforest is China's prime example of a concentrated, diverse, well-preserved, and expansive continental island-type tropical rainforest.
The Hainan Tropical Rainforest National Park, covering a total area of 4,269 square kilometers, spans nine cities and counties in the province. The forest coverage rate in the national park is as high as 95.86 percent.
A total of 3,653 species of vascular plants had been recorded in the national park as of May 2024.
The national park includes the only habitat for Hainan gibbons, the world's rarest primate. The population of Hainan gibbons has increased from less than 10 forty years ago to 42 this year, according to the latest data.
Since the establishment of the national park, seven new species and newly recorded species have been spotted in the Wuzhishan section.
Photos
Related Stories
- China allocates 443 mln yuan to fight drought, aid summer planting
- Chinese researchers discover mechanism to trigger plant regeneration
- Researchers complete survey on plants in Macao
- Feature: Researchers unravel evolutionary history of baobab trees
- Chinese scientists achieve breakthrough in combating plant cancer
- Several new plant species discovered in SW China nature reserve over past decade
- Researchers unravel plants' "cry for help" response in fighting disease
- First space-bred ‘giant panda in the plant world’ returns to the wild
- Rare, endangered plants reintroduced into China's Three Gorges Reservoir area
- New plant species discovered in SW China
Copyright © 2024 People's Daily Online. All Rights Reserved.