ChinAfrica

Weaving Wildlife Protection

Villagers flock together to protect feathered friends

- By CUI XIAOQIN, reporter, China Today

On 6 August, Zhou Guimei, a villager from Huangnan Village, Dadongba Town, Songyang County, Lishui City in east China’s Zhejiang Province, found a “strange bird” she had never seen before while washing clothes by a stream. She said the bird had green claws, big eyes, a sharp beak and white spots on its wings. She noticed that it couldn’t stand up, so she assumed it had been injured. Zhou immediatel­y contacted the village ranger and took the bird home. While waiting for the ranger, she tried to feed the bird a bite of fish, but it quickly spat it out.

Ye Weirong is the deputy secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Huangnan Village Branch, as well as the village ranger. He immediatel­y reported the news to the forestry authority of Songyang County, took pictures of the bird and sent them to the forest patrol group on Weixin, one of China’s most popular instant messaging apps. Forestry officials rushed to Huangnan Village that night and took the bird to a wildlife hospital for medical treatment. Experts identified the bird as the White-Eared Night Heron, an endangered species under national protection. The results of the examinatio­n showed that the bird had not sustained any injuries, but that its stomach contained many parasites, rendering it unable to eat or stand up. A few days later, after careful treatment, the fully recovered bird was released back into the wild.

Passing the baton

With an estimated population of only 1,000, the WhiteEared Night Heron is one of the 30 most endangered birds in the world. They live mainly in valleys with dense forests and high hills, and in places with special water quality and environmen­t. Ye was very happy to see the appearance of the night heron because it means that Songyang’s ecological environmen­t has improved significan­tly.

It is a tradition in Songyang for everyone to love birds and wildlife. A prime example is Yuan Linwei’s family, who have been protecting owls for several generation­s.

“It was 1989 and I was only 9 years old. While playing in front of my house, I found an owl chick in an open field.” Yuan recalled how he and his grandfathe­r took the chick back to the nest. Since then, every year by the end of February, a pair of owls would appear at Yuan’s house and fly away four months later with three or four chicks. Yuan is now over 40 and for the past

30 years, his family has lived in this old yellow mud house. They have not moved or renovated, just making sure that generation­s of owl “tenants” can lay their eggs, hatch and brood in the attic of the house. So far, more than 100 owls have been born in Yuan’s home and then returned to nature. He later learned that the owl was a Collared Scops Owl, or Otus Lettia, and that it is a species under national second-class protection.

Songyang’s improved ecological environmen­t has attracted more and more wild animals to settle down in the area. As of 2010, every winter, the scaly-sided merganser would fly to Songyang to spend the winter there. Songyang has become a real “bird paradise.” In May this year, around the Internatio­nal Biodiversi­ty Day, Songyang organised the fourth Internatio­nal Invitation­al Competitio­n for Birdwatchi­ng of Lishui City. Thirty competing teams from China and abroad recorded 228 species of birds in two days, setting a new record for the competitio­n, compared with 133,165 and 195 species in the first, second and third editions, respective­ly.

“For many, birdwatchi­ng has become more than a hobby. Observing and recording birds, and even carrying out educationa­l campaign on human’s feathered friends have become the responsibi­lity of those who care about nature,” said Xie Wei, president of Lishui City Bird Ecological Protection Associatio­n.

Joint e!ort

It is the extensive public participat­ion that has made Songyang’s ecological story go viral online. The owls living in Yuan’s house have now become celebritie­s in their own right. In May 2020, Lishui City Radio and Television Station’s account on Douyin, Chinese version of TikTok, livestream­ed the owl stars 24/7, with hundreds of thousands of netizens eagerly tuning in to watch the mother raise her chicks.

The owl videos have been viewed more than 300 million times. Many netizens said they would watch what the owls were doing before going to work in the morning, and again at night after coming home from work. Chai Songwei is an engineer with the Songyang County Natural Resources and Planning Bureau. One late night, his phone was ringing off the hook with countless calls claiming the owl had gotten stuck in the attic exit. Chai quickly contacted Yuan to investigat­e. It turned out that the owl had caught a large rat stuck in the attic vent, and the many worried fans were relieved when the crisis was over.

In December 2022, during the second phase of the 15th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity in Montreal, Canada, Yuan’s owl story touched everyone when it was told during the Zhejiang Theme Day at the event’s China Corner.

“In Songyang, protecting wildlife has become the local consensus,” Zhou Dongmei, secretary of the CPC

 ?? ?? A view of the Songyin Creek Wetland in Songyang County, Lishui City, Zhejiang Province
A view of the Songyin Creek Wetland in Songyang County, Lishui City, Zhejiang Province

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