A Tibetan antelope looking back at the camera in the Chang Tang National Reserve, Tibet Autonomous Region, SW China, December 11, 2020. /VCG
A Tibetan antelope looking back at the camera in the Chang Tang National Reserve, Tibet Autonomous Region, SW China, December 11, 2020. /VCG
A Tibetan antelope wandering around the Chang Tang National Reserve, Tibet Autonomous Region, SW China, December 11, 2020. /VCG
A Tibetan antelope wandering around the Chang Tang National Reserve, Tibet Autonomous Region, SW China, December 11, 2020. /VCG
A Tibetan antelope spotted in the Chang Tang National Reserve, Tibet Autonomous Region, SW China, December 11, 2020. /VCG
A Tibetan antelope spotted in the Chang Tang National Reserve, Tibet Autonomous Region, SW China, December 11, 2020. /VCG
A pair of Tibetan antelopes roaming in the Chang Tang National Reserve, Tibet Autonomous Region, SW China, December 11, 2020. /VCG
A pair of Tibetan antelopes roaming in the Chang Tang National Reserve, Tibet Autonomous Region, SW China, December 11, 2020. /VCG
Five male and six female Tibetan antelopes were spotted foraging on the snow-covered plateau in the Chang Tang National Nature Reserve in southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region on December 11.
Home to over 200,000 Tibetan antelopes, the Chang Tang Nature Reserve was acclaimed as a "wildlife paradise."
Tibetan antelope is a specie native to China and is under first-class state protection. In the past 60 years, Tibetan antelopes were once classified as endangered due to rampant illegal poaching, but its population increased significantly in recent years due to strict protective measures.
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