Urgent!
~~~
Someone in Shaanxi saw the South China tiger and took photos. It was absolutely true.
However, many experts expressed doubts and believed that it was fake, so there was a lot of debate. However, in any case, for thousands of years, the South China tiger has roamed freely on the land of China and has been passed down to our generation.
I can’t even tell if I don’t have it, which is sad!
If someone asks me, are there South China tigers?
I may not simply say yes or no, I can only answer you according to my thinking and way: so be it!
Let’s just follow what people in Shaanxi say: There are South China tigers in Shaanxi, so what should we do?
Is it okay for us to engage in development and tourism there, so that many people who have never seen a tiger can see it, build roads and build houses, and have all the facilities including food, accommodation, transportation and high-end facilities?
I remind you that this is absolutely not possible. Even if there are South China tigers in Shaanxi, ordinary people cannot see them, or it is extremely difficult to see them. If we all must see South China tigers, then South China tigers will probably be the only ones hiding in Tibet.
A few will be frightened to death. There may be reports in a few months: the South China tigers in Shaanxi died under the rocks, and we will never see them again.
Some people will say that if there are South China tigers in Shaanxi, we can send experts to study it, or engage in artificial breeding, wild stocking, etc., so that this population can develop and grow, making Shaanxi and China world-famous. Here I would also like to remind you:
I have also seen many PhDs and experts conducting research on wild animals, especially some foreign experts, such as tracking, photography, anesthesia, shipping, treatment, etc., but I found that these research activities have more or less caused damage to animals.
In terms of damage to wild animals, these research activities have not increased the number of these wild animals. After these experts and scholars have studied, they almost always have only one result: that is, the number of these wild animals is declining. If not protected,
It will die out in a certain era...I am confused here. Since we all know the results, why do we always want to study it?
Besides, we still have endless generations of descendants, so why not leave it to our descendants to study?
Maybe the technology in the future will be better and we can study wild animals without seeing them. If that’s not better, why do we rush to study them? Is there any other purpose?
When it comes to research, the Japanese are the most despicable. They slaughter whales in large numbers under the guise of research, but they can't do anything to them.
Some people may say that your statement is too extreme. If there are South China tigers in Shaanxi, we can engage in artificial breeding and develop this population!
But have we seen how many wild animal populations we have saved using this method? Yes, we still have tigers, leopards, etc. in our zoos, but they have lost their nature as wild animals, even if a few are left.
, just let us watch it and feel comforted!
In other words, if we see a South China tiger and catch it for artificial breeding, maybe all the South China tigers will become South China cats by then.
To sum up, if there are South China tigers in Shaanxi, we cannot engage in tourism or development, nor can everyone rush to study it. People in Shaanxi will still farm, and those who work will still work. The monthly income will remain the same.
Do your job honestly, and the only thing you have to do is to make sacrifices and make great efforts to protect this area where South China tigers live. To be on the safe side, we have to return farmland to forests, return fields to lakes, and expand the protected area. We would rather be poor.
One thing, there is no guarantee that one day, a group of South China tigers will rush down the mountain, why should we argue?
Let's go back and go back to what some experts said. There are no South China tigers in Shaanxi at all. If there are no South China tigers in Shaanxi, then tourism and development should not be done there. Just think that the people of Shaanxi told a white lie. They are
I just want to name names, I just have a little money, and we should all be more generous and broad-minded, and don't chatter endlessly. However, the unanimous view of Shaanxi people and experts is that the natural ecology of that place is very good, and it is very likely that there are South China tigers. If it is
In this way, the only thing we have to do is to make sacrifices and make great efforts to protect this area that may be the last home of the South China tiger. We must also expand the protected area. Maybe there will still be a population of South China tigers. By then we
No need to argue.
Are there any South China tigers?
My answer was a lot of nagging, but to put it more politely, it is: it doesn’t matter whether there are South China tigers or not. What is important is that we should underestimate self-interest, make self-sacrifice, and truly protect the environment and protect wild animals.
If in the future we continue to argue over which place has a hare or not, that will be our greater sorrow.
Population status 1950s and 1960s: According to incomplete statistics on the annual tiger skin purchases in my country's fur market, 1,750 tiger skins were purchased nationwide in 1956.
In the 1950s, tigers were found in more than 20 counties in Jiangxi Province, and 171 tigers were hunted in the province from 1955 to 1956.
In the 1950s and 1960s, no trace of tigers was found in Wanxian County in eastern Sichuan and the Daba Mountain area at the junction of Shaanxi, Sichuan and Hubei.
From 1952 to 1953, Hunan Province captured 170 tigers.
In 1964, Mr. Shou Zhenhuang estimated that about 800 South China tigers were hunted every year based on the number of tiger bones and skins purchased from various places. He was obviously suspected of "releasing satellites".
Tigers were also caught in Anhui in 1966.
In the early 1950s, more than 50 tigers were hunted in Guangdong Province, and in the 1960s, there were about 20 tigers.