Seventy Years of China's Nature Reserve Construction: Ecological Stewardship from Mount Everest to Heixiazi Island

The construction of nature reserves has witnessed China's seventy years of stewardship, with ongoing ecological restoration from Mount Everest to Heixiazi Island Drone monitoring, wetland restoration, and scientific support—click to see how different regions are protecting biodiversity

China's nature reserve construction has gone through 70 years. The People's Daily recently published an article introducing conservation practices in places such as Mount Qomolangma, Inner Mongolia's Hanma, Guangdong's Dinghushan, and Heilongjiang's Heixiazi Island, showcasing the longterm efforts made across regions in ecological restoration, biodiversity conservation, and scientific research and monitoring. In the Mount Qomolangma National Nature Reserve, the core area is no longer open to tourists, and patrols and scientific research have been continuously strengthened. The local research station uses meteorological and environmental monitoring equipment to record ecological changes at high altitudes, and provides data support for species surveys and snowandice observations in the Mount Everest region. The Inner Mongolia Daxing'anling Hanma National Nature Reserve, meanwhile, has gradually formed an integrated