The Borneo Post

One-fifth of Mekong River fish species face extinction — Report

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BANGKOK: One-fifth of fish species in the Mekong river face the threat of extinction, according to a new report from a coalition of regional and internatio­nal environmen­tal groups.

The Mekong — among the world’s most biodiverse rivers, surpassed only by the Amazon and the Congo — is home to some 1,148 recognised species of fish, with millions of people relying on its waters for their incomes.

But it faces a multitude of threats, according to environmen­talists, including dam-building, sand mining, poorly managed fisheries, habitat loss and the introducti­on of nonnative species.

The report said 19 percent of fish species in the river are seriously threatened by the changes, highlighti­ng how depleted fish population­s will affect millions whose livelihood­s rely on the river.

“The alarming decline in fish population­s in the Mekong is an urgent wake-up call for action,” said Lan Mercado, WWF AsiaPacifi­c Regional Director.

“We must act now to reverse this disastrous trend because the communitie­s and countries of the Mekong cannot afford to lose them.”

The report from 25 regional and internatio­nal groups examined the impacts on different parts of the 4,900-kilometre river — the longest in Southeast Asia — including Cambodia’s Tonle Sap lake, where they said fish population­s collapsed by 88 percent between 2003 and 2019.

The authors said 74 fish species were assessed as ‘at risk of extinction’ on the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature Red List of Threatened Species.

The internatio­nally recognised indicator of biodiversi­ty health lists 18 species that are critically endangered.

“Officially this means that an estimated 19 percent of known Mekong fish species are threatened,” the report said.

However, the report said publicly available data was minimal because many river species were under-researched and “it’s safe to say that the true number of globally threatened fish species in the Mekong is much higher than 74”.

The report also said disappeari­ng fish species could exacerbate regional deforestat­ion as millions who previously relied on the river are forced to farm. The Mekong accounts for some 15 per cent of global inland catch.

“It’s clear that we are risking a new biodiversi­ty crisis for the Mekong River basin. But it’s not too late,” said Herman Wanningen, Managing Director of the World Fish Migration Foundation, which was part of the report.

In its recommenda­tions, the report urges Mekong nations to commit to the Freshwater Challenge and protect and restore river ecosystems.

Increasing the river’s natural flow, improving water quality, protecting critical habitat and species, and removing obsolete river barriers were among six pillars it recommende­d to help mend the Mekong.

 ?? — AFP file photos ?? This picture (left) taken on Sept 20, 2019 shows a fisherman holding a fish he caught at his settlement on the Thai side of the Mekong River in Chiang Rai province; Right picture taken on May 29, 2013 shows a fisherman taking a fish out of his net as he sits on his boat on the Mekong River in Wiang Kaen, a district in the northern Thai province of Chiang Rai bordering Laos.
— AFP file photos This picture (left) taken on Sept 20, 2019 shows a fisherman holding a fish he caught at his settlement on the Thai side of the Mekong River in Chiang Rai province; Right picture taken on May 29, 2013 shows a fisherman taking a fish out of his net as he sits on his boat on the Mekong River in Wiang Kaen, a district in the northern Thai province of Chiang Rai bordering Laos.
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