日日爽I天天爽天天爽I日韩有码第一页I国产中文字幕在线观看I狠狠躁夜夜a产精品视频I在线免费av播放I麻豆免费视频I91成人免费

Feature: Hope prevails for the baiji dolphin's comeback

Source: Xinhua| 2018-05-08 13:32:37|Editor: ZD
Video PlayerClose

By Xinhua Writer Luan Xiang

BEIJING, May 8 (Xinhua) -- More than a decade has passed since the Chinese baiji dolphin, or Lipotes vexillifer, was declared "functionally extinct."

Yet a recent image of the long-missing "Goddess of the Yangtze" has sparked hope for its reappearance as Asia's longest river recovers its ecological vitality.

IS THAT YOU, MISSING "GODDESS"?

Though the dolphin was believed by many to have gone extinct in the wild, some environmental scientists have never stopped believing that, somewhere along the vast drainage of the world's third longest river, a few remaining members of the rare species may be fighting for survival, far away from human activity.

Earlier this week, the China Biodiversity Conservation and Green Development Foundation (CBCGDF) released a photograph of a baiji lookalike, captured last month in a section of the Yangtze near Wuhu in the eastern province of Anhui.

Previous reports had been circulating about fishermen spotting a few of the blueish-gray mammals twice, both adults and young calves.

The foundation claimed that several researchers who have worked closely with the baiji or specialized in its study confirmed the image to be a surviving specimen of the species.

"Though the baiji is very likely to have gone extinct in the wild, the possibility remains that a few last surviving specimens could still be out there," said Wang Kexiong, professor with the Institute of Hydrobiology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Wuhan, in an interview with Xinhua.

The institute said it would be imprudent to identify the animal in a photograph without further evidence. Nonetheless, it is too soon to label the species "extinct."

The proof goes beyond just one image, said Su Fei, director of the CBCGDF's Baiji Program. For three years, the foundation has been organizing observation trips to raise protection awareness about the Yangtze's freshwater dolphins. In May 2017, several observers were confirmed to have witnessed the elegant mammal.

The baiji does not live in solitude, said Li Xinyuan, an investigator and baiji dolphin enthusiast who was present when the April image was taken, describing the moment of encounter as "extremely emotional."

"For two days straight, our teammates witnessed the baiji, but it was gone before they could press the shutter. On the third day, the photographer Jiao Shaowen decided to use a camera lens, rather than binoculars, to observe the water's surface, so he was able to take the shot the instant the baiji emerged," said Li, who led an ex-situ conservation project on the baiji in the 1980s.

He believes that if one was spotted, there could be a small school nearby.

"It is noticeable that the river's water quality and ecosystem have kept improving, thanks to state-led protection efforts," he said, stressing that hope prevails for the species to recover in number if environmental improvement continues.

WHAT NOW?

"To salvage the probable surviving baiji dolphins, emergency actions need to be taken with the country's best resources, talent and technology," said Hua Yuanyu, one of the pioneer scientists to survey the species back in the 80s.

"Waterborne transportation along the Yangtze ought to be properly managed to reduce the noise that has gravely affected the life of these sonar-guided dolphins," said the retired professor from Nanjing Normal University's Life Science Institute.

Meanwhile, destructive fishing methods such as high-voltage electrofishing, floating gill netting, and muro-ami, a technique that uses encircling nets with pounding devices, should be strictly forbidden, and any violation should be punished to protect both the dolphins and their prey, warned Hua.

"The baiji is a mammal that uses its lungs to breathe. If shocked by electricity, it may lose consciousness and drown," he said, criticizing the disastrous fishing practices as well as the discharge of waste into the waterway.

He called for enhanced law enforcement and wider education of local fishermen to turn them into protectors of the ecosystem.

"The protection of the Yangtze should include the water, the banks and the wetlands along its path, as the ecosystem is a whole," he said, and suggested the river dolphin's protection zone be extended to cover the habitat of the estimated last few baijis in Wuhu.

"I am optimistic that once the environment keeps improving, the baiji will come back," said Hua, inventor of a sonar orientation method that he and his team used to observe and deduce the size and distribution of the baiji population in 1986.

Back then, there were still nearly 300 of them living in 42 family-like schools along the Yangtze. Hua believes that these intelligent mammals have been hiding from human activity and river industries to survive quietly in some unexploited, serene waters.

The scholar praised the Chinese government's ambitious plan to protect the Yangtze ecosystem, predicting even better outcomes for the strategy.

NOT YET A FAREWELL

The baiji, scientific name Lipotes vexillifer, is a unique freshwater dolphin known to only inhabit the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze river, where it had flourished for more than 20 million years, until industrialized fishing and a boom in transport in recent decades pushed the species to the edge of extinction.

In ancient times, the aquatic mammal was regarded as the goddess of protection for fishermen and boatmen along the 1,700-kilometer waterway from central China all the way to the Pacific.

Once described as "numerous," the last known living baiji died in captivity in 2002. After an international expedition in late 2006 failed to find any continued proof of its existence, the species was declared "functionally extinct" the following year.

On the IUCN's Red List of Threatened Species, the baiji dolphin was marked as "critically endangered, possibly extinct."

In the absence of the "goddess," China has been making vigorous efforts in restoring the ecosystem of the Yangtze. Building an ecological civilization was even written into the Constitution as a national development objective.

As a result, scientific surveys have confirmed an increasing number of the Yangtze finless porpoise, another of the river's mammal residents.

The reappearance of the baiji is another piece of evidence of the improved Yangtze ecology, said Hua.

Professor Wang Kexiong with the institute of hydrobiology said that there is still a long way to go for the protection and restoration of the Yangtze's natural habitats of species such as the finless porpoise.

"But the current development strategy has been adjusted toward the correct direction," he said.

"Monitoring, protecting, revitalizing and restoring the Yangtze's ecology and natural habitats should be our main tasks for the next 50 years," he said.?

TOP STORIES
EDITOR’S CHOICE
MOST VIEWED
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011100001371637701
主站蜘蛛池模板: 91丨九色丨91啦蝌蚪老版 | 日韩在线观看视频一区二区三区 | 日日干天天爽 | 91黄色免费网站 | 婷婷丁香狠狠爱 | 日韩有码中文字幕在线 | 日韩1级片| 一区二区日韩av | 天天操月月操 | 97人人澡人人添人人爽超碰 | 国产资源站| 亚洲亚洲精品在线观看 | 国产又粗又猛又色 | 国产国语在线 | 精品免费99久久 | 女人魂免费观看 | .国产精品成人自产拍在线观看6 | 国产精品一区二区果冻传媒 | 婷婷色站 | 色婷婷av一区二 | 国产精品久久久久久爽爽爽 | 国产91综合一区在线观看 | 久久人人爽人人片av | 午夜在线观看影院 | 婷婷久月 | 九九久久视频 | 激情开心色| 久久久久久久久久久久99 | 日韩免费专区 | 九九综合在线 | 午夜三级影院 | 日本中文乱码卡一卡二新区 | 成片人卡1卡2卡3手机免费看 | 欧美精品一区二区在线播放 | 免费网站观看www在线观看 | 国产精品久久久久av免费 | 日韩精品一区二区三区不卡 | 免费情趣视频 | 在线亚洲精品 | av中文字幕在线免费观看 | 亚洲成a人片77777潘金莲 | av免费观看高清 | 婷婷婷国产在线视频 | 六月激情丁香 | 一区二区三区精品久久久 | 在线视频一区二区 | 91香蕉视频色版 | 五月婷婷丁香 | 91精品无人成人www | 国产精品国产三级国产不产一地 | 日本不卡123 | 成人在线观看资源 | 在线观看国产 | 久久精品人人做人人综合老师 | 狠狠网站 | 亚洲四虎 | 久久这里有精品 | 黄色小说视频网站 | 又粗又长又大又爽又黄少妇毛片 | 91高清视频在线 | 美女在线观看网站 | 伊人中文字幕在线 | 成人av影院在线观看 | 超碰在线观看av.com | av一区在线播放 | 日日夜夜亚洲 | 狠狠干干| 久久撸在线视频 | 久久午夜电影 | 国产一级片久久 | 最近更新的中文字幕 | 亚洲激情视频 | 国产免费又黄又爽 | 婷婷丁香自拍 | 中文字幕在线一区二区三区 | 精品视频久久 | 手机成人在线 | 色永久免费视频 | 日韩精品中字 | 色在线免费 | 久久,天天综合 | 精品电影一区 | 麻豆视频免费播放 | 91精品视频播放 | 在线视频18在线视频4k | 超碰久热 | 欧美精品黑人性xxxx | 亚洲涩涩色 | 96久久精品| 免费在线观看的av网站 | 国产成人av网址 | 久久国产精品99久久人人澡 | 欧美性极品xxxx做受 | 日本精品中文字幕在线观看 | 黄色一集片 | 国产精品久久二区 | 精品一区二区在线播放 | 久久国产精品99久久人人澡 | 在线播放 日韩专区 |