World's Biggest Wetland Attracting Rare Birds

  • September 14, 2017, 8:39 pm
  • World News
  • 184 Views

PANJIN, Liaoning Sep 13 (Xinhua-AsiaNet/PPI): Every autumn, Panjin Red Beach in the northeast of Bohai Bay of China is swarming with migratory birds. Nearly 100 kinds of rare birds, including the red-crowned cranes, white cranes, oriental white storks, wild geese and ducks, stopover at the marshland, resting and restoring strength for their southward flights for winter.
With the improvements to local ecology, a lot more birds have chosen to winter there, turning the land into a paradise of birds. It's the northernmost place where wild red-crowned cranes spend the winter. Not a sandy beach as its name indicates, Red Beach is the world's best-preserved marshland and has an important position in the study of bio-diversity and wetland preservation.
Some 287 kinds of birds, including dozens of precious seabirds such as white swan, egrets, heron, garganey and swan goose, dwell on this land. It is also the breeding ground of saunders's gull and phoca largha pallas.
In a rating by China's tourism authorities, Panjin Red Beach has been listed among the country's first batch of exemplary destinations for wetland tourism. Boasting of a land up to 3,149 sq. km., it is the world's biggest wetland.
Covered by crimson-red seepweed which keeps expanding at 50 meters a year to the sea, the wetland has a distinctive beauty, as the seepweed common to coastal areas around the world is green. Local residents take the land as a treasure of the Mother Nature.
In late fall, the dense marsh that grows along its shores turns brilliant red. The best time to travel in the Red Beach is during the months of May to October.
The multicolored landscape offers a feast to eyes. Apart from the red marshland, there are green reeds, black crude oil, Blue Ocean, golden year of rices, gray crabs and white seagulls. Clean air, rich in negative oxygen ions, is very refreshing.
Panjin City has invested a lot to develop an all-in-one tourism. Facilities include hot springs, guesthouses, Rice Museum and restaurants are very convenient to access.