Honghe National Nature Reserve Explained

Honghe National Nature Reserve
Map:China
Location:Heilongjiang Province, China
Coordinates:47.757°N 133.695°W
Area:218.35km2
Established:1984

The Honghe National Nature Reserve (HNNR), is a 218.35km2 Ramsar Convention-designated site in Heilongjiang Province in northeastern China. It was first established in 1984 as a provincial wetland reserve, and was upgraded to be a national nature reserve in 1996. 173 birds are known from the Reserve including protected species such as black stork, black-billed capercaillie, greater spotted eagle, the Kamchatkan or Steller's sea eagle, mandarin duck, Oriental white stork, red-crowned crane, white-naped crane, white-tailed sea eagle, and whooper swan.[1]

Ecological status

Zhou, et al. (2009)[2] conducted a statistical analysis using historical survey data to study marsh degradation and changes in the hydrological regime from both natural and human impacts and concluded strategies are urgently needed to maintain sustainable economic benefits while preserving this nature reserve.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: "Cultural China" - website . 2012-07-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120128091455/http://scenery.cultural-china.com/en/163Scenery7122.html . 2012-01-28 . dead .
  2. Demin Zhou, Huili Gong, Yiyong Wang, Shahbaz Khan and Kuiyi Zhao. 2009. Driving Forces for the Marsh Wetland Degradation in the Honghe National Nature Reserve in Sanjiang Plain, Northeast China. Environmental Modeling and Assessment Volume 14, Number 1 (2009), 101-111, DOI: 10.1007/s10666-007-9135-1