China owned 2,750 natural reserves across the country at the end of September 2019, data from the National Forestry and Grassland Administration (NFGA) showed.
China's natural reserves cover a total area of 1.47 million square kilometres, accounting for 15 per cent of the country's land territory, according to a statement on the administration's website.
The reserves are home to 35 million hectares of natural forest and around 20 million hectares of natural wetland, protecting 90.5 per cent of terrestrial ecosystem types, 85 per cent of wild animal and plant types as well as 65 per cent of higher plant communities.
More than 300 wild animals and 130 wild plants under the country's key protection are preserved, enhancing the country's biodiversity, the NFGA said.
China's rare and endangered animals thrive in the reserves, with the number of wild crested ibis surging from seven to more than 2,000, that of grey snub-nosed monkey growing 1.5 times to more than 750 and the number of Asian elephants rising from 170 to more than 230.
China designated Dinghu Mountain, which lies in southern China's Guangdong Province, as its first natural reserve in 1956 to protect forests.