China’s Fragile Forests

Produced by Sean Gallagher, with funding also from Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting

Natural forests cover about 10 percent of China’s surface area, but few of the forests remain in a primary or pristine condition. These forests are threatened primarily by timber collection, mining, unregulated harvesting of flora for traditional Chinese medicine and excessive development related to increased tourism.

In China’s southern provinces, the mountainous forests that previously covered much of the region have been reduced by about 92 percent.

It is these forests which are home to last of the Giant Pandas, which number only approximately 1600 in the the wild. Progressive habitat destruction has pushed China’s most famous species to the brink of extinction.

In 2011, the UN’s official “International Year of Forests,” the forests of the southwest of China were classified by Conservation International as one of the world’s top ten most threatened forest regions.

Originally published on Thursday April 12, 2012

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