释义 |
- The list Australia Cambodia China Federated States of Micronesia India Indonesia Iran Japan Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Malaysia Maldives Mongolia Myanmar North Korea Pakistan Palau Philippines South Korea Sri Lanka Thailand Turkmenistan Uzbekistan Vietnam
- References
- External links
Under UNESCO's Man and Biosphere Reserve Programme, there are 142 biosphere reserves recognized as part of the World Network of Biosphere Reserves in Asia and the Pacific as of April 2016. These are distributed across 24 countries in the region.[1] The listBelow is the list of biosphere reserves in Asia and the Pacific, organized by country/territory, along with the year these were designated as part of the World Network of Biosphere Reserves. Australia- Croajingolong, Victoria (1977)
- Riverland, South Australia (1977)
- Kosciuszko, New South Wales (1977)
- Prince Regent River, Western Australia (1977)
- Mamungari (formerly Unnamed), South Australia (1977)
- Uluru (Ayers Rock-Mount Olga), Northern Territory (1977)
- Yathong, New South Wales (1977)
- Fitzgerald River, Western Australia (1978)
- Hattah-Kulkyne and Murray-Kulkyne, Victoria (1981)
- Wilsons Promontory, Victoria (1981)
- Mornington Peninsula and Western Port, Victoria (2002)
- Barkindji, New South Wales and Victoria (2005)
- Noosa, Queensland (2007)
- Great Sandy, Queensland (2009)
CambodiaChina- Changbaishan (1979)
- Dinghushan, Guangdong (1979)
- Wolong, Sichuan (1979)
- Fanjingshan, Guizhou (1986)
- Xilin Gol, Inner Mongolia (1987)
- Wuyishan, Jiangxi and Fujian (1987)
- Bogeda, Xinjiang (1990)
- Shennongjia, Hubei (1990)
- Yancheng, Jiangsu (1992)
- Xishuangbanna, Yunnan (1993)
- Maolan, Guizhou (1996)
- Tianmushan, Zhejiang (1996)
- Fenglin (1997)
- Jiuzhaigou Valley, Sichuan (1997)
- {{Interlanguage link multi|Nanji Islands|zh|3=南麂列岛}}, Zhejiang (1998)
- Shankou Mangrove, Guangxi (2000)
- Baishuijiang, Gansu (2000)
- Gaoligong Mountain, Yunnan (2000)
- Huanglong Scenic and Historic Interest Area, Sichuan (2000)
- Baotianman, Henan (2001)
- Saihan Wula, Inner Mongolia (2001)
- Dalai Lake, Inner Mongolia (2002)
- Wudalianchi, Heilongjiang (2003)
- Yading, Sichuan (2003)
- Foping, Shaanxi (2004)
- Qomolangma (Mount Everest), Tibet (2004)
- Chebaling, Guangdong (2007)
- Xingkai Lake, Heilongjiang (2007)
- Mao'er Mountain, Guangxi (2011)
- Jinggangshan, Jiangxi (2012)
- Niubeiliang (2012)
- Snake Island - Laotie Mountain (2013)
- Hanma (2015)
Federated States of Micronesia- Utwe (2005)
- And Atoll (2007)
India- Nilgiri (2000)
- Gulf of Mannar (2001)
- Sunderbans (2001)
- Nanda Devi (2004)
- Nokrek (2009)
- Pachmarhi (2009)#MP
- Simlipal (2009)
- Achanakmar-Amarkantak (2012)
- Great Nicobar (2013)
- Agasthyamala (2016)
- Khangchendzonga (2018) ( Sikkim)
Indonesia- Cibodas, including Gunung Gede Pangrango National Park (1977)
- Komodo (1977)
- Lore Lindu (1977)
- Tanjung Puting (1977)
- Gunung Leuser (1981)
- Siberut (1981)
- Bukit Batu (2009)
- Wakatobi (2012)
- Bromo Tengger Semeru, including Arjuno-Welirang (2015)
- Taka Bone Rate (2015)
- Balambangan (2016)
Iran- Arasbaran (1976)
- Arjan and Parishan (1976)
- Geno (1976)
- Golestan (1976)
- Hara (1976)
- Kavir (1976)
- Lake Urmia (1976)
- Miankaleh (1976)
- Touran (1976)
- Dena (2010)
- Tang-e-Sayad & Sabzkuh(2015)
- Hamoun (2016)
Japan- Mount Hakusan (1980)
- Mount Ōdaigahara & Mount Ōmine (1980)
- Shiga Highland (1980)
- Yakushima Island (1980)
- Aya (2012)
- Minami-Alps (2014)
- Sobo, Katamuki and Okue (2017)[2]
- Minakami (2017)[2]
Kazakhstan- Korgalzhyn (2012)
- Alakol (2013)
- Akzhayik (2014)
- Katon-Karagay (2014)
- Aksu-Zhabagly (2015)
- Barsakelmes (2016)
- Altyn-Emel (2017)[2]
- Karatau (2017)[2]
Kyrgyzstan- Sary-Chelek (1978)
- Issyk Kul (2001)
Malaysia- Tasik Chini (2009)
- Crocker Range (2014)
MaldivesMongolia- Great Gobi (1990)
- Bogd Khan Mountain (1996)
- Ubsunur Hollow Biosphere Reserve (1997)
- Khustain Nuruu National Park (2002)
- Dornod Mongol (2005)
- Mongol Daguur (2007)
Myanmar- Inlay Lake (2015)
- Indawgyi Lake (2017)[2]
North Korea- Mount Paekdu (1989)
- Mount Kuwol (2004)
- Mount Myohyang (2009)
- Mount Chilbo (2014)[3]
Pakistan- Lal Suhanra National Park (1977)
- Ziarat Juniper Forest (2013)
PalauPhilippines- Puerto Galera (1977)
- Palawan (1990)
- Albay (March 2016)
South Korea- Mount Sorak (1982)
- Jeju Island (2002)
- Shinan Dadohae (2009)
- Gwangneung Forest (2010)
- Gochang (2013)
Sri Lanka- Hurulu (1977)
- Sinharaja (1978)
- Kanneliya-Dediyagala-Nakiyadeniya (KDN) (2004)
- Bundala (2005)
Thailand- Sakaerat (1976)
- Hauy Tak Teak (1977)
- Mae Sa-Kog Ma (1977)
- Ranong (1997)
TurkmenistanUzbekistanVietnam- Cần Giờ Mangrove Forest (2000)
- Cát Tiên National Park (2001)
- Cát Bà Island (2004)
- Red River Delta (2004)
- Kien Giang (2006)
- Western Nghệ An (2007)
- Cape Cà Mau National Park (2009)
- Chàm Islands – Hội An (2009)
- Langbiang (2015)
References1. ^{{cite web|title=Asia and the Pacific|url=http://www.unesco.org/new/en/natural-sciences/environment/ecological-sciences/biosphere-reserves/asia-and-the-pacific/|website=Ecological Sciences for Sustainable Development|publisher=UNESCO|accessdate=26 May 2016}} 2. ^1 2 3 4 {{cite web|url=http://en.unesco.org/news/23-new-sites-added-unesco-s-world-network-biosphere-reserves |title=23 new sites added to UNESCO’s World Network of Biosphere Reserves |publisher=UNESCO |date=14 June 2017}} 3. ^{{Cite web | title = Mount Chilbo (Democratic People's Republic of Korea) | work = unesco.org | date = 2014 | accessdate = 2015-05-24 | url = http://www.unesco.org/new/en/media-services/multimedia/photos/mab-2014/korea/ }}
External links- List of UNESCO World Network of Biosphere Reserves in Asia and the Pacific
- List of UNESCO World Network of Biosphere Reserves of Asia and the Pacific
- UNESCO World Network of Biosphere Reserves
{{Biosphere Reserves}} 1 : Biosphere reserves |