Protected plant list updated
Revision offers hobbyists and scientists the opportunity to raise greater awareness over biodiversity.
Earlier this month, the State Forestry and Grassland Administration began to solicit public opinion on the upcoming revised content of the "National Key Protected Wild Plants List". This is the first major revision of the list since its implementation in 1999.
According to the notice issued by the administration, the list includes a total of 468 species and 25 categories of wild plants, of which 53 species and two categories are under primary protection, and 415 species and 23 categories are under secondary protection. On the basis of the first batch of the list, 55 species were deleted, 296 species and 17 categories were added. Two species were upgraded from national secondary protection to national first-level protection, while 18 species and two categories of first-level protection were downgraded to secondary level.
"There are many exciting changes in this new list," says Gu Yourong, associate professor at School of Life Sciences, Capital Normal University, and PhD in Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences. "The biggest highlight is the inclusion of 104 species of orchids. Orchids have suffered from pirated harvesting because of their ornamental nature. More than half of China's 1,500 orchids are threatened. Although only 104 species have been included this time, I believe it is going to help alleviate orchid pirated harvesting."
Gu is among the many plant enthusiasts who called for greater awareness of species diversity of wild plants in China.