In high Tibet, patrol officers protect wildlife
On the sandy path where the motorcycle passes, a billowing dust cloud forms,
and gradually Tharchen's figure disappears.
The place where Tharchen patrols is in Shanza county of the Tibet autonomous region
and part of the Changthang National Nature Reserve.
At 298,000 square kilometers, the reserve is China's biggest.
It has become a haven for rare wildlife on the high plateau.
Tharchen is one of 42 local patrol officers in Shanza county working to protect wildlife,
despite the cold, thin air at high altitude.
Patrolling is vital in the reserve, a stable home to many rare species
such as wild yaks, argali, Tibetan antelopes, black-necked cranes,
snow leopards and Tibetan wild asses. Tharchen helps protect them from hunters and
flu epidemic - from unpredictable damage to the wetlands.
With their motorbikes, telescopes and notebooks, patrol officers leave their footprints
in every corner of the grassland. Every year, June is the busiest time,
as that's when the female Tibetan antelopes give birth.
"In the summer, our daily work is patrolling and monitoring for six to eight hours
- up to 300 kilometers per day," Tharchen was quoted as saying by Tibet Daily.
He recalled the unusual rescue of a Tibetan wild ass in 2020 after his team was infromed
by local herdsmen. The animal was stuck deep in a swamp,
but they were able to pull it out with ropes.
"Oure clothes got wet, and we found ourselves shivering in the freezing cold after
the rescue," said the 34-year-old Tharchen.
Tibet has seen a steady increase in the number of rare species unique to the region
in recent years. Benefiting from their efforts to protect biodiversity,
the Tibetan antelope population has grown to more than 200,000 animals from fewer than
70,000 previously. The Tibetan wild ass population has risen to nearly 90,000
from the previous 50,000.
And the number of black-necked cranes has grown to more than 8,000
from between 1,000 and 3,000.