Giant panda Golden snub nose monkey South China tiger Yak By Ruby Alton
China’s most favourite animal. There are probably about 1,600 giant pandas left in the wild. They are classified as an endangered species mainly because their habitats are destroyed. The Giant panda is protected by law. They live in the high west of China by moving from one mountaintop forest to another. Panda’s main food is bamboo. They digest only about a fifth of what they eat. So they eat a lot, up to 12 hours per day. Conservation: Working with the government to create safe places to live I live over there ( Ailuropoda melanoleuca)
The Golden snub nose monkeys live in the mountains and forests of south China. They too are endangered They eat young leaves, fruit, seeds and buds. Golden snub nose monkeys live in family groups of one male and many females. The family groups band together with others, forming troops of 20 to 30 monkeys in the winter and up to 200 in the summer. Conservation: to create safe homes for them to live in. I live here (Rhinopithecus roxellana)
The South China tiger were hunted for Chinese medicines and they are thought to be pests. The Chinese government band hunting in 1979 by 1996 there were tigers lift in the wild. Today the south China tiger is thought to be extinct as they haven't been see in the wild for 25. (Panthera tigris amoyensis)
They live on the grasslands of Tibet Virtually everything that a family has or needs is from a yak. That is meat, wool and rich milk used to make cheese, yogurt, and yak butter. Yak bones make jewellery and Yak dung is used as fuel for fires. In the wild the Yak males and females live apart. The Yaks threats are being hunted for meat. I live here Wild Yak (Bos mutus) Domesticated Yak (Bos grunniens )
Chinese children love to keep crickets as pets in a little wooden cage. The Chinese love the beautiful music that their crickets make. Cricket chirping in your house brings good luck!
The Chinese New Year is marked by a certain animal and each animal means something special.
If you would like to help any of the Chinese animals that I have spoken about a good way is to adopt one at: World Wildlife Fund