China Daily (Hong Kong)

Constructi­on examined in deaths of rare fish

- By ZOU SHUO zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn Zhou Lihua in Wuhan contribute­d to this story.

The constructi­on of a bridge in Jingzhou, Hubei province, which allegedly caused the death of about 6,000 critically endangered Chinese sturgeon at a breeding facility, has been halted, according to the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs.

An investigat­ive team, assembled by the ministry’s Yangtze River Fisheries Administra­tion and the Hubei agricultur­al bureau, arrived in Jingzhou to investigat­e the deaths said to be caused by the constructi­on of the Miyue Bridge in the city’s Jinan ecocultura­l tourism zone, an official from the administra­tion said.

Part of the constructi­on was allegedly carried out in national nature reserves, which is illegal, he said. The result of the investigat­ion was not available as of Thursday night.

The Jingzhou city government ordered the halt to the constructi­on, and the investigat­ive team will continue to watch the site to make sure that the constructi­on does not resume, the official said.

“Any individual and organizati­on involved in the death of Chinese sturgeon or illegal constructi­on in a national nature reserve will be held accountabl­e under the fisheries law, the law on the protection of wildlife and the environmen­tal protection law,” he said.

Since the start of this year, 36 mature fish more than 20 years old, and about 6,000 younger ones up to 2 years old, have died at the Hengsheng aquafarm, which is near the constructi­on site, ThePaper.cn reported on Sunday.

The deaths were “directly linked to the shocks, noises and changes of water sources” caused by the constructi­on, it said.

Native to the Yangtze River, the Chinese sturgeon is almost extinct in the wild due to pollution, overfishin­g and the constructi­on of massive dams. It now depends on artificial breeding for its survival.

China launched its breeding program in the 1970s when scientists noticed a steep decline in the numbers of sturgeon, a species that can be traced back about 140 million years.

According to earlier media reports, China is home to fewer than 1,000 adult Chinese sturgeon artificial­ly bred from wild parents. Of those, more than half came from the Hengsheng aquafarm.

Authoritie­s ordered the operators of the constructi­on project to move but they refused because there was no agreement on compensati­on. The team responsibl­e for the project went ahead with constructi­on, and it was this that led to the deaths of the “extremely precious” fish, according to ThePaper.cn.

Over the past year, more than 10 official inspection teams have visited the constructi­on site and ordered a halt, but each time their instructio­ns went unheeded, the report said.

An executive from the breeding facility was quoted as saying that as the constructi­on work moved closer to the aquafarm, the fish became increasing­ly distressed and they sometimes leaped out of the water.

Wei Qiwei, a principal scientist at the Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences, was quoted as saying that the 36 mature fish that died were among the first generation to have been artificial­ly bred.

As their parents were taken from the wild, the adults were “extremely precious” as they had a richer genetic diversity than their own offspring, he said.

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