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Environment
The third-largest country in the world, China
is bounded to the north by the deserts of Mongolia, to the west by the
inhospitable Tibetan plateau and the Himalaya, and to the east by the
East and South China seas. China's 22 provinces and five autonomous regions
are governed from Beijing, along with some 5000 islands. Hong Kong and
Macau have returned to the fold as Special Administrative Regions (SAR).
Disputed territories are dotted near and far around China's south-east
coast. Taiwan - a festering dispute that flares up from time to time -
is the best known. Then there's the oil-rich Spratly Island group which
every country in the region wants to suck dry, the Diaoyutai Islands (known
as Senkaku to the Japanese), the Paracels (or Xisha, if China gets its
way), and the Pescadores (or Penghu).
The statistics for population and area refer to mainland China.
The topography included in China's vast panorama runs the gamut from towering
mountains to featureless plains. The terrain descends across the planet
from Tibet's 'roof of the world' in the west, down through the Inner Mongolia
Plateau and east to the plains of the Yangzi River valley. In the south-west,
the Yunnan-Guizhbou Plateau has a lacerated terrain with numerous gorge
rapids, waterfalls, underground caverns and limestone pinnacles, making
it one of the country's most spectacular regions. Inland features include
the Taklamakan Desert shifting salt lakes and the Turpan Depression (China's
hottest region, and known as the Oasis of Fire). Melting snow from the
mountains of western China and the Tibetan Plateau provides the headwaters
for many of the country's major trade routes: the Yangzi, Yellow, Mekong
and Salween rivers.
Given China's size, it's only to be expected that its animal life is diverse.
Unfortunately, much of the country's rich natural heritage is rare, endangered
or extinct, largely due to the destruction of habitat caused by agriculture,
urbanisation and industrial pollution. Magnificent animals endemic to
China - but found in increasingly low numbers - include pandas, snow leopards,
elephants, argali sheep, wild yaks, reindeer, moose, musk deer, bears,
sables and tigers. Bird-watchers can spot cranes, ducks, bustards, egrets,
swans and herons in the country's lakes and nature reserves (of which
there are more than 300).
China's plant life has fared a little better under the crunch of a billion
people, but deforestation, grazing and intensive cultivation have all
taken their toll. The last great tracts of forest are in the subarctic
north-eastern region near the Russian border, while the tropical south
is home to the country's most diverse plant life, including rainforest.
China's many useful plants include bamboo, ginseng, angelica and fritillary.
China's climate ranges from bitterly cold to unbearably hot, and a whole
lot in between. Temperatures in the north can drop to -40¡ãC (-40¡ãF) in
winter (December-March) and rise to 38¡ãC (100¡ãF) in summer (May-August).
The central Yangzi River valley area also experiences extreme seasonal
temperatures. In the far south, the hot and humid summer lasts from April
to September and, as in north China, coincides with the rainy season.
Typhoons can hit the southeast coast between July and September. The northwest
experiences dry, hot summers, with China's nominated hottest place - Turpan
- receiving maximums of around 47¡ãC (117¡ãF). Winters here are as formidably
cold as in the rest of northern China.
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