Helping white-fin dolphins escape their deteriorating natural
habitat in the Yangtze River remains the last hope of saving the
primitive species, a group of academicians believes.
With the world's only captive white-fin dolphin getting older in Wuhan,
capital of Hubei Province, more and more people are aware that it
is urgent to accelerate conservation work with the world's most
endangered species by rescuing more wild dolphins from the busy
navigation route of the Yangtze River, and moving them to a nature
reserve.
An
optimistic view holds that fewer than 100 white-fin dolphins, known
in China as Yangtze River dolphins, exist in their only natural
habitat, the Yangtze. The species have survived for 25 million
years in China's longest river.
The Actual number of the "living fossil" is probably much fewer
than that, said Zhu Zuoyan, member of the Chinese Academy of
Sciences (CAS). He added that any conservation work would be
useless 10 years from now, when the remaining dolphins would be too
few to sustain the species.
Yangtze River dolphins are on the list of the world's 12 most
endangered animals. If no effective moves are made to save them,
the species will be extinct in 20 years. The danger the dolphins
face is much more serious than that of the Giant Panda.
CAS's research shows that it is impossible to avert the
deteriorating environment for the Yangtze River dolphins in such
limited time. The animals would constantly face the risks of
serious pollution, busy waterways and rampant illegal fishing, if
they continued to stay in the river.
"Relocation is the last hope for the dolphins," said a group of
academicians from CAS and members of the Chinese Political
Consultative Conference.
They are endeavoring to get government consent and to mobilize
environmentalists to help with the dolphin protection work.
The experts prefer to move the dolphins to the Shishou Tian'ezhou
White-Fin Dolphin Nature Reserve, which is a state-level Yangtze
River dolphin reserve set up in Shishou, in central China's Hubei
Province, in 1992.
The 21-km long river reserve used to be a course of the Yangtze
River waterway. It has been protected from human disturbance and
has abundant aquatic life.
The conservationists managed to move 10 cowfish to the reserve 10
years ago, a species listed in the second category of China's most
endangered animals. Numbers have since increased to over 20. The
cowfish's life cycle is similar to that of the Yangtze River
dolphins.
The experts' advice has been taken by the Ministry of Agriculture,
which has decided to launch a joint program with CAS to capture
wild Yangtze River dolphins this autumn.
The experts said it is very difficult to catch the dolphins, since
they swim very fast. This is one of the reasons why the dolphin Qi
Qi has lived alone for 22 years without a mate in an aquarium run
by a CAS subsidiary in Wuhan.
A
recent physical examination found that Qi Qi's aging is getting
more obvious. The natural life span of a white-fin dolphin is 25-30
years old. When the injured male dolphin was rescued by fisherman
in 1980, he was under two years old. He was cured by aquarium
specialists and became the world's first and the only Yangtze River
dolphin in captivity.
Qi
Qi has let thousands of visitors know what a white-fin dolphin
looks like, and helped in various scientific experiments. Aquarium
specialists say that Qi Qi's age is equal to a man in his 70s. He
has already become one of the world's oldest dolphins in captivity.
They intend to help him reach 30 years old.
(Xinhua News
Agency June 15, 2002)