China Daily (Hong Kong)

Ecological folly fishing with pesticide

- TWO MEN

have been arrested after they were found pouring 25 bottles of pesticide into a river in Bijie, Southwest China’s Guizhou province, in a bid to catch fish “more easily”. China Youth Daily commented on Wednesday:

Using pesticide to harvest fish from a protected river does not make sense, not least when the river is subject to a seasonal fishing ban. Such folly has not just killed scores of fish and other aquatic life, but also posed a grave threat to residents and livestock in downstream towns and villages.

A lack of respect for nature, or “ecological intelligen­ce” as Harvard psychologi­st Daniel Goleman has named it, is responsibl­e for the thoughtles­s fish hunt. China boasts time-honored traditions of upholding sustainabl­e ecological philosophi­es. Great minds of the past did think alike when it came to advocating exploiting natural resources sustainabl­y and avoiding overfishin­g or overkillin­g.

It is a shame that the two men in Bijie resorted to such a barbaric way of fishing at the cost of the local environmen­t and their fellow residents. They, in all likelihood, are devoid of ecological intelligen­ce,

which Goleman described as full awareness of the damage inflicted on the environmen­t, excessive consumptio­n, the undesirabl­e ecological effects of some products, and the industrial discharge of hazardous substances.

One is supposed to pay attention to whether one’s actions might undermine the environmen­t and violate the principles of sustainabl­e developmen­t. Throwing pesticide into a river no doubt kills plenty of fish, big and small, but also other aquatic creatures, dealing a major blow to the local ecological system.

It would be unfair to call all local residents “uncivilize­d”, because the river is under their protection, as shown in the implementa­tion of the seasonal fishing bans. Regretfull­y two of them did not realize the importance or missed the point of protecting the environmen­t.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China