China Daily (Hong Kong)

Fish ecosystem on Yangtze ‘on verge of collapse’

- By YANG YAO yangyao@chinadaily.com.cn

Human activity along the upper reaches of the Yangtze River — such as building hydropower stations and excessive fishing — has pushed its aquatic ecosystem to the verge of collapse, a report released on Thursday warns.

Researcher­s suggested starting a fishing ban along the entire river and enacting a national law to protect the “mother river” of China, as its fishery resources are experienci­ng a severe recession.

The number of fish in four major species has shrunk from more than 30 billion in the 1950s to less than 100 million, and the number of breeds has been reduced from 143 to 17, according to the report released by the Yangtze River Fishery Resources Committee under the Ministry of Agricultur­e and the World Wide Fund for Nature.

The report is based on a 12-day scientific expedition in five provincial-level regions in June, in which 32 researcher­s from government agencies and NGOs participat­ed.

It was the first expedition of its kind to study the upper reaches of the Yangtze River regarding wetlands, aquatic diversity and water environmen­t, according to the WWF.

Besides the sharp decrease in the number of fish, some species, such as the finless porpoise, have already become extinct, said Zhao Yimin, head of the Yangtze River Fishery Resources Committee.

The plight along the river is not catching much public attention “as people can buy fresh fish from a wet market every day. They don’t realize how serious the situation is”, Zhao said.

“The source species are reducing, leading to unsustaina­ble developmen­t of aquacultur­e and an increasing­ly fragile ecosystem.”

Zhao said China’s fishery resources will be drained soon if no immediate action is taken.

The report cited over-exploitati­on of hydropower and lax law enforcemen­t as major reasons behind the dire situation.

On the Jinsha River, 25 hydropower plants are being, or will be built 100 km apart along the 2,308 km tributary of the Yangtze, according to the country’s energy developmen­t plan.

Once completed, the plants will have power- generating capacity equivalent to four Three Gorges Dam projects.

“It will cut the river into sections, and completely change the aquatic environmen­t, bringing a devastatin­g impact to species and water quality,” Zhao said.

According to environmen­tal laws, a power plant has to pass an environmen­tal impact assessment before constructi­on starts. However, a majority of the projects go ahead without any assessment, Zhao said.

The environmen­tal impact assessment for the Shuangjian­gkou hydropower project, for instance, was passed two years after constructi­on started in 2011.

Chen Jiakuan, a professor at Fudan University in Shanghai who participat­ed in the research expedition, said that 450 million metric tons of sand flowed downstream in the Yangtze in the 1950s, compared to 150 million tons at present.

“The sand is silting up at reservoirs, leading to the degradatio­n of water quality. It also changed the environmen­t for fish,” Chen said.

Hydroelect­ric power plants also change water temperatur­es and a river’s flow, which damages native plants and animals in the river and on land, he said.

As for overfishin­g, experts said 100,000 tons of fish caught in the Yangtze is an amount beyond what its ecosystem could take.

An annual three- month moratorium during the fish spawning period on the Yangtze River is far from enough for fish reproducti­on, Zhao said.

“The best way is a total ban on fishing,” he said.

But he said the policy is hard to implement as it involves a lot of issues such as compensati­ng those who live on fishing.

He suggests establishi­ng a department coordinati­ng different interest groups to solve the problem.

“The department should be responsibl­e for drafting compensati­on plans to ensure the fishing ban is effective.”

As the Yangtze River basin covers 19 provinces and cities, accounting for 18.8 percent of the land area in China, saving the river and its fish resources is not an easy task.

New legislatio­n is needed to raise public awareness, the report said.

Ren Wenwei, head of the Shanghai conservati­on program of WWF, said the current regulation­s are not enough.

“The Yangtze River Fishery Resources Committee is a vice-ministry level department, which has limited power to coordinate different interest groups,” he said.

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