Equus kiangs, the largest of the wild asses and native to the Tibetan Plateau, are seen on a grassland in Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Northwest China’s Qinghai Province in early autumn. The species inhabit an area at 3,600-5,400 meters above sea level and are under first-class animal protection in China. [Photo/China News Service]
Equus kiangs, the largest of the wild asses and native to the Tibetan Plateau, are seen on a grassland in Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Northwest China’s Qinghai Province in early autumn. The species inhabit an area at 3,600-5,400 meters above sea level and are under first-class animal protection in China. [Photo/China News Service]
Equus kiangs, the largest of the wild asses and native to the Tibetan Plateau, are seen on a grassland in Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Northwest China’s Qinghai Province in early autumn. The species inhabit an area at 3,600-5,400 meters above sea level and are under first-class animal protection in China. [Photo/China News Service]
Equus kiangs, the largest of the wild asses and native to the Tibetan Plateau, are seen on a grassland in Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Northwest China’s Qinghai Province in early autumn. The species inhabit an area at 3,600-5,400 meters above sea level and are under first-class animal protection in China. [Photo/China News Service]
Wang was born a serf in old Tibet's Nagqu. His parents, both beggars at the time, sent him t...