Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel reservation - Has the driver of off-road vehicle who participated in chasing and crushing the wild protected animal Tibetan antelope in Naqu been controlled?
Has the driver of off-road vehicle who participated in chasing and crushing the wild protected animal Tibetan antelope in Naqu been controlled?
At about 17 in the afternoon, Lhasa police and Forest Public Security Bureau have controlled the drivers of two cars involved in the case at the Intercontinental Hotel in Lhasa and found the hidden vehicles. Now the police are investigating and interrogating the two drivers.
Tibetan antelope is an animal belonging to the genus Tibetan antelope of Bovidae. Body length 135cm, shoulder height 80cm, weight 45-60kg, female slightly smaller. The head is wide and long, the snout is thick, and the nose is wide and slightly lifted. Males have long black horns.
Habitat in alpine grasslands, meadows and alpine desert areas at an altitude of 3700-5500 meters, foraging in the morning and evening, good at running. Can form a large group of tens of thousands of people. In summer, females will migrate northward along a fixed route. It is in a sub-zero environment all the year round and is a national first-class protected animal. Qiangtang, Hoh Xil, Sanjiangyuan and other nature reserves have been established, which are mainly distributed in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (Qinghai, Tibet and Xinjiang) with Qiangtang as the center in China, with a small amount in Ladakh.
1999 international symposium on protection and trade control of Tibetan antelope in Xining, China was held in Xining. After in-depth discussion and full deliberation, representatives from seven countries, including China, French, Indian, Italian, Nepalese and British, formally issued the Xining Declaration on the Protection and Trade Control of Tibetan Antelope. The official release of this declaration marks the initial formation of international cooperation to combat poaching of Tibetan antelopes and stop the illegal international trade in cashmere products of Tibetan antelopes, which will greatly promote the protection of Tibetan antelopes resources.
On September 4, 20 16, IUCN announced that it would reduce the threatened degree of Tibetan antelope from endangered to vulnerable.
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