China Daily

Experts call for concerted efforts to save species

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Protecting wild birds will require the consolidat­ed efforts of wildlife authoritie­s, bird enthusiast­s and the public, plus a comprehens­ive review of the environmen­tal situation inside and outside nature reserves, wildlife experts said.

“After several years of wildlife monitoring and evaluation at the administra­tion, I realized that solo efforts by a local institutio­n were unlikely to have a major impact on conservati­on,” said Lei Gang, head of the Freshwater Program at the World Wildlife Fund China.

Lei led the research department of the East Dongting Lake National Nature Reserve Administra­tion in Hunan province until 2002.

He said his research at the nature reserve was confined to a limited geographic­al area, but solving problems related to wild species, especially migratory birds that travel thousands of kilometers a year, demands a wider perspectiv­e.

“The diversity of bird species is so large and complicate­d that the administra­tion alone was unable to count and conserve them as expected,” he said.

In 2002, Lei started an annual bird-watching competitio­n in an attempt to draw more attention from the media and bird-watchers to conservati­on efforts at the lake.

So far, about 100 new bird species have been identified by participan­ts in the competitio­n, he said. Meanwhile, the reserve’s website said it had recorded 348 species by April.

“Back at the beginning of the century, the team at the administra­tion was loose and disorganiz­ed, but the media that swarmed to the lake as the competitio­n gained fame prompted the authoritie­s to stop slacking,” he said.

The number of administra­this tion staff members at the nature reserve has risen to about 70, and 18 cameras have been set up in key areas to monitor illegal activities.

Meanwhile, the issuance of administra­tive penalties is now shared by the nature reserve administra­tion and the local forestry bureau, which has greatly improved the legal force exerted on offenders.

The benefits brought by training the spotlight on the lake have exceeded Lei’s expectatio­ns — public awareness of wildlife conservati­on has been enhanced, communicat­ion between bird experts has offered fresh insights and new measures and policies have been introduced.

Last year, the number of water birds — mostly migratory species — seen at the lake rose by 20 percent from 2016.

Meanwhile, about 108 white cranes, a critically endangered species, were spotted earlier year, breaking the previous record of 76, according to Lei.

In 2003, he began working for the World Wildlife Fund, and helped to establish a freshwater program that focused on improving monitoring technologi­es along the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River.

“It’s impossible for a single administra­tion to make progress on such a large scale,” Lei said.

“I am seeing a pattern here that pools the strengths of government­s, NGOs, experts and the public.”

However, some species are still vulnerable to offenders as a result of loopholes in the supervisio­n network.

Lei said most poaching, including the use of mist nets and tranquiliz­er drugs, occurs close to the edges of the reserve, which are not covered by the cameras.

Lei Chunguang, dean of the School of Nature Conservati­on at Beijing Forestry University, has noticed a number of mist nets during frequent field studies at Poyang Lake in Jiangxi province.

“Concerted efforts to fight poachers are primarily devoted to areas where migratory birds change direction or land, thus leaving themselves more vulnerable to poachers who lie in wait. The efforts are playing a major role in cracking down on this illegal activity,” he said. “However, poaching is still rampant in areas that are not covered by the regulation­s and attract few visitors.”

He said pollution and illegal human activities that go unchecked at Poyang Lake mean the number of species where the population is rising is smaller than those where numbers are declining.

“We should understand that the environmen­t is a whole entity, not a slew of islands that can be separated as individual nature reserves,” he added.

 ?? FU JIANBIN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Migrating swans gather at Poyang Lake in Jiangxi.
FU JIANBIN / FOR CHINA DAILY Migrating swans gather at Poyang Lake in Jiangxi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong