Off the wire
U.S. stocks open higher on global rally, oil prices  • German industrial output drops for second consecutive month in March  • Urgent: 15 police officers wounded in explosion in SE Turkey  • China Voice: Next Philippine leader faces new South China Sea horizon  • FLASH: STRONG EXPLOSION OCCURS IN DIYARBAKIR PROVINCE IN SOUTHEASTERN TURKEY, SOME WOUNDED  • Bangladesh jail authorities ask family members to meet death row war criminal Islamist party chief  • Urgent: 1 killed, 5 injured in eastern Afghan car bombing  • Norway extends internal Schengen border controls  • Chinese vice premier urges better use of agricultural funds  • Chinese Olympic diving squad almost decided as Olympic trials end  
You are here:   Home

Released Pere David's deer have cubs

Xinhua, May 10, 2016 Adjust font size:

The population of a group of Pere David's deer released from captivity to live around Dongting Lake in central China in March has risen to 18, as park rangers found two cubs among them.

Two of the 11 female deer among the original 16 were pregnant at the time of the release. The group was raised in east China's Jiangsu Province, but released to enrich the gene pool of the deer population around Dongting Lake in Hunan Province.

Pere David's deer, endemic to the subtropics of China, have been pulled back from the brink of extinction, but they now face new uncertainty in Hunan due to Dongting Lake's rising water level in flood season. This may force them to move nearer to local villages and place them in conflict with farmers, said Zhang Hong, a manager at Dongting Lake Nature Reserve.

The reserve administration has warned villagers that the deer are under state protection and must not be harmed. The administration has set up feeding crops and water supplies for the deer in the reserve.

Around 100 deer were counted around Dongting Lake after the new arrivals in March.

There were none in the area before a catastrophic flood drove a handful of them to escape from Shishou Nature Reserve in neighboring Hubei Province and cross the Yangtze River to settle there in 1998.

Pere David's deer were named after a Basque missionary to China who introduced them to Europe in the late 19th century.

The species was left extinct in China by 1900 due to natural disasters and hunting. In 1985, 22 specimens were brought to China from the world's only herd in Bedfordshire, the United Kingdom.

China is now home to two-thirds of all the Pere David's deer in the world, around 3,000 living in three specialized reserves in Beijing, Hubei and Jiangsu. Hunan's Dongting Lake, however, has China's largest population of free-roaming Pere David's deer. Endi