Qinghai assists wild asses
2004-03-16
China Daily
XINING: Twelve rescued Tibetan wild asses have been returned to the wild in the Hoh Xil Nature Reserve in Northwest China, according to the administration of the State nature reserve.
Like the Tibetan antelope, the wild ass is also rare on the Tibetan Plateau and a priority on the list of animals under State protection.
To protect the endangered species from extinction, the Chinese Government has set up three nature reserves on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau including one at Hoh Xil.
At the end of 2003, zoologists with the Hoh Xil Tibetan Antelope Rescue Centre in the nature reserve found a baby Tibetan wild ass with wolf bites and brought it back to the rescue centre, where it received veterinary treatment and intensive care. That was the first Tibetan wild ass the centre rescued.
By February 2004, the centre had rescued five grown wild asses and another six foals. They were injured by wolf bites or from highway accidents.
After a six-day effort, researchers at the centre successfully returned all 12 asses to the wild.
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