本書為中宣部對(duì)外出版項(xiàng)目“地圖上的中國”系列圖書之一。“地圖上的中國”系列圖書利用地圖作為講述中國故事的載體,通過地圖搭載豐富的中國歷史文化、自然地理、當(dāng)代發(fā)展等內(nèi)容,同時(shí)在紙質(zhì)圖書基礎(chǔ)上開發(fā)可視聽化的電子讀物,達(dá)成融合傳播效果,幫助廣大海外讀者更好地了解中國。中國是世界自然資源和生物多樣性最豐富的國家之一。本分冊(cè)《美麗家園》講述中國珍稀野生動(dòng)物、植物的故事,再現(xiàn)它們的生活繁育環(huán)境,以此展示中華大地的自然之美、生態(tài)之美、和諧之美,反映中國生態(tài)文明建設(shè)取得的顯著成效。
盛寶軍,中學(xué)地理教師,曾獲黑龍江省地理教學(xué)技能大賽一等獎(jiǎng),在《少年兒童故事報(bào)》《童話世界》《探索地理》等報(bào)刊雜志發(fā)表多篇文章。
Sheng Baojun, a high school geography teacher, won the first prize in the Heilongjiang Geography Teaching Skills Contest. He published fairy tales and essays on Children’s Stories, Fantasy Fairy Land and Geography Exploration, and some of his essays are included in primary school Chinese textbooks for extracurricular reading.
01
Beautiful Land
This Is the Land of China
The skeleton across the land of China · 12 ·
Four plateaus with different “personalities” · 16 ·
Big basins between mountains · 20 ·
Plains blanketed with green · 24 ·
Beautiful rivers and lakes · 26 ·
China’s seas · 30 ·
02
Animal Kingdom
China’s Animal Kingdom
Giant panda · 38 ·
Sichuan golden snubnosed monkey · 41 ·
Manchurian tiger · 44 ·
South China tiger · 46 ·
Wild yak · 48 ·
Tibetan antelope · 50 ·
Snow leopard · 52 ·
Takin · 54 ·
Przewalski’s gazelle · 56 ·
Kiang · 58 ·
Elk · 60 ·
White-browed gibbon · 62 ·
Ibex · 64 ·
Asian elephant · 66 ·
Bactrian camel · 70 ·
Eld’s deer · 72 ·
Taiwan monkey · 74 ·
Brown-eared pheasant · 76 ·
Golden pheasant · 78 ·
Crested ibis · 80 ·
Red goral · 82 ·
Hooded crane · 84 ·
Siberian white crane · 87 ·
Swinhoe’s pheasant · 89 ·
Chinese merganser · 91 ·
Chinese alligator · 94 ·
Yangtze finless porpoise · 96 ·
Dugong · 99 ·
Chinese sturgeon · 102 ·
03
Plants Are Friends
China’s Plant World
Metasequoia glyptostroboides · 111 ·
Fraxinus hubeiensis · 114 ·
Bretschneidera sinensis · 117 ·
Cyclocarya paliurus · 120 ·
Taxus wallichiana var. mairei · 122 ·
Alsophila spinulosa · 124 ·
Davidia involucrata · 126 ·
Michelia odora · 128 ·
Parashorea chinensis · 130 ·
Ginkgo biloba · 132 ·
Camptotheca acuminata· 135 ·
Pseudolarix amabilis · 137 ·
Liriodendron chinense · 139 ·
Camellia petelotii · 141 ·
Taiwania cryptomerioides · 143 ·
Glyptostrobus pensilis · 146 ·
Saussurea involucrata · 149 ·
Populus euphratica · 152 ·
Panax ginseng · 155 ·
Cupressus gigantea · 157 ·
Conclusion: Protect Our Beautiful Home · 159 ·
Due to its vast territory, as well as its intricate and diverse natural environment, China’s animal resources are extremely rich, with more than 50,000 species of wild animals. According to relevant statistics in 2018, species of wild vertebrates in China account for more than 10% of the total number of animal species in the world. China has 499 species of mammals, ranking 5th in the world; 1,186 species of birds, ranking 10th in the world; 279 species of amphibians, ranking 6th in the world; 412 species of reptiles, accounting for 6.5% of the world’s total; about 3,400 species of fish, accounting for 12.1% of the world’s total; 30,000 species of named insects; 9 of the world’s 15 species of cranes; 46 of the world’s 148 species of geese and ducks, and 56 of the world’s 276 species of wild pheasants.
In China, there are Asian elephants walking through the tropical rain forests of Xishuangbanna in the south, Siberian tigers crouching in the ice and snow of the Lesser Khiggan Mountains in the north, Chinese sturgeons cruising in the Yangtze River, and Tibetan antelopes running on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
Because of its unique history of geological evolution, China has many ancient species that have long been extinct in other parts of the northern hemisphere, such as giant pandas, golden monkeys and wild Bactrian camels. China also has more than 100 species of unique and rare wild animals including South China tigers, brown eared pheasants, red-crowned cranes, crested ibis, white-flag dolphins and Chinese alligators. Meanwhile, China is also a country with a large distribution of endangered animals. According to incomplete statistics, there are more than 120 endangered animals originating in China (referring to species originating in China) listed in the appendix of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, 257 species on the List of Wild Animals under State Priority Conservation, and 400 species of birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish in the China Red Data Book of Endangered Animals.