Fit for porpoise: China races to save last Yangtze river mammal
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[September 09, 2019]
By David Stanway
NANJING, China (Reuters) - On a short
stretch of the Yangtze river, three sleek grey porpoises twist in muddy
waters near the city of Nanjing, protected from passing barges and ships
by a row of yellow buoys.
With only 1,000 remaining, the Yangtze finless porpoise is a symbol of
the damage done to China's longest river in a decades-long campaign to
tame floods, reclaim farmland and industrialize the regions along its
banks.
President Xi Jinping's call for sustainable growth in the Yangtze
"economic belt" has raised hopes that the river's last surviving mammal
can become an emblem of China's environmental revival.
"It has now been scientifically proven that the Yangtze porpoise is a
unique species," said Jiang Meng, who heads a group that oversees the
porpoise safe haven at Nanjing.
"If it isn't protected well, the Chinese government will be under
pressure," Jiang, secretary general of the Nanjing Yangtze Finless
Porpoise Conservation Association, told Reuters.
The safe zone is tucked behind a "ecological red line" that bans
construction on 34 sq miles (88 sq km) of territory along the shore.
Rows of fish farms have been replaced by lotus ponds teeming with
migratory birds. Fishing is restricted and ships are routed away from
the zone, which is patrolled daily.
"We chase them away - this is a core area so we can't let them fish
here," said Yang Jinlong, a fisherman-turned-conservationist.
China counted 1,012 Yangtze porpoises in its last census in 2017, down
from 2,500 in 1991, and the numbers are falling by about 10% a year,
officials said.
The porpoise can still be saved, Jiang said. "The numbers are still
falling but the rate of decline is slowing."
It's been done before, activists say. A decades-long conservation effort
saved the giant panda, China's national symbol, from the brink of
extinction. There are around 1,900 giant pandas today, and their numbers
are rising.
"It may be too little too late, but what they are doing is
unprecedented," Todd Robeck, author of a recent study into the Yangtze
porpoise, said of the effort to save the mammal.
"They are putting in the right pieces to keep this animal from going
extinct," said Robeck, vice president of conservation research at
SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment in Orlando, Florida.
"HUMAN ACTIVITIES"
From its origins in the glaciers of Tibet to its delta in Shanghai on
the eastern coast, the 4,000-mile Yangtze provides water to a third of
China's population.
It has been the scene of profound and destructive environmental changes
over the past 70 years, caused not only by giant feats of engineering
like the Three Gorges Dam, but also a Mao-era campaign to drain lakes
and wetlands.
For decades, its complex ecosystem was sacrificed in a frantic rush for
economic growth.
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A porpoise is pictured at the Yangtze river near the city of
Nanjing, Jiangsu province, China August 21, 2019. REUTERS/Aly Song
The "baiji" or white-finned dolphin, a larger cousin of the
porpoise, was declared "functionally extinct" in 2006. The Chinese
sturgeon is also on the brink of annihilation, with fish stocks
plunging 90% in the last few decades.
Many porpoises are killed in collisions with boats because noise
pollution affects their echolocation, while a degraded habitat and
polluted water exposes them to contagious diseases.
A 10-year government action plan released in 2016 blamed
"intensified human activities" for the fall in porpoise numbers and
said past protection efforts failed to arrest the decline.
However, the action plan was limited in scope, aiming only to
"stabilize" porpoise populations, improve monitoring, raise public
awareness, and deepen genetic and stem cell research.
SAFE ZONES
Nanjing is considered a model protection zone, and it has spent
around 30 million yuan since it opened in 2014 on surveillance
equipment and a full-time staff of 20.
Elsewhere, authorities last month imposed a 10-year fishing ban from
2021 at Poyang, China's largest freshwater lake and another home to
finless porpoises. The ban will affect 100,000 fishermen, Xinhua
news agency reported.
And a 40-mile (64 km) stretch of the Yangtze at Anqing, in Anhui
province, has been declared a porpoise safe haven and off limits for
fishing.
"We are optimistic because the state has made protection a
priority," said Chen Shouwen, a conservation official at Anqing's
rural affairs bureau.
Activists hope publicity will help save the porpoise, but some
campaigns can misfire. Conservationists were enraged last year when
authorities captured 14 wild porpoises and put them on display in
marine parks in Shanghai and along the east coast.
Researchers have had some success in breeding porpoises
artificially, but the numbers are small. China may be forced to
preserve the species by storing reproductive cells and repopulating
the river when conditions improve.
"I don't think it will ever return to the way it was, but there
might be some mitigation efforts where they can thrive quite
normally in the Yangtze," Robeck said.
"I'm really hopeful their efforts will be an example for what can be
done in the future."
(Reporting by David Stanway; additional reporting by Shanghai
newsroom; editing by Darren Schuettler)
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