The Phnom Penh Post

Dolphin calf spotted in the Mekong

- Phak Seangly

THE Ministry of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries and the World Wildlife Fund’s (WWFCambodi­a) Mekong dolphin Research Team confirmed the presence of a 10-day-old Irrawaddy dolphin calf.

The team took photograph­s of the calf on May 16 while it swam among seven adult dolphins in Kratie province’s Kampi pool area, according to a press release from WWFCambodi­a on May 21.

The newborn brings the number of calves to three spotted between January and May 2021.

The number is less than last year as travel restrictio­ns amid the Covid-19 community outbreak have prevented research teams from completing surveys during March and April, which is the peak season for the birth of the dolphins, known by their scientific name Orcaella brevirostr­is.

The monitoring programme checks the status of dolphins and estimates their number along the 180km of the Mekong River between Kratie town and the Cambodia-Laos border.

The 2020 census of the dolphin’s population by the Fisheries Administra­tion and WWFCambodi­a showed only 89 still living in the Mekong River.

WWF-Cambodia country director Seng Teak explained that every single newborn calf is important for the survival of the small Irrawaddy dolphin population.

“The protection of the animals from the harmful effects of human activities is even more critical to reduce the species’ mortality rate,” he said.

The dolphin is listed as critically endangered on the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on

of Nature Red List.

Between January and May 2021, the research team recorded four dolphin deaths – one adult died by entangleme­nt in a gill net, another died of old age while the cause of deaths for the calf and the other dolphin is unknown.

With a similar mortality rate recorded between January and May 2020, WWF-Cambodia’s scientists find the trend worrisome and urge the need of even more collective action and stronger conservati­on measures to save the species from extinction.

 ?? WWF CAMBODIA ?? WWF record third newborn Mekong dolphin on May 21.
WWF CAMBODIA WWF record third newborn Mekong dolphin on May 21.

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