Megan Gannon,
News Editor
Date: 29 March
2013 Time: 04:06 PM ET
Giant pandas have become China 's poster child for endangered
species, but now another iconic animal in the country can claim to be even
rarer than the bears.
There are just 1,000 individual Yangtze finless porpoises left in
the wild, according to a new report. That's less than half of what a similar
survey of the porpoises found six years ago.
The rapidly dwindling numbers have conservationists worried that
the species could vanish from the wild as early as 2025.
"The species is moving fast toward its extinction," said Wang Ding, head of the
expedition to count the porpoises and a professor at the Institute
of Hydrobiology at the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Yangtze finless porpoises, the only freshwater finless porpoise in
the world, live mainly in the Yangtze River and China 's
Dongting and Poyang lakes. They are threatened
by shrinking food resources and man-made disturbances like shipping traffic.
The expedition, which took place over 44 days last fall, comes
after a similar trek along the Yangtze in 2007 failed to find any surviving Baiji dolphins, a close relative of the
finless porpoise that was subsequently declared functionally extinct.
The new report showed that some finless porpoises are splintering
off into relatively isolated groups, which could hurt their ability to
reproduce. The scientists also noted that more of the animals seemed to be
flocking to wharf and port areas, perhaps to look for food.
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