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River dolphin population 'dying'

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Housecarl
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  Quote Balaam Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: River dolphin population 'dying'
    Posted: 03-Sep-2007 at 04:40
River dolphin population 'dying'
Monday Sep 3 16:25 AEST

The world's river dolphin population is dying out thanks to bad environmental practices that also threaten the health of their human neighbours, an international environmental conference has been told.
 
The 10th annual Riversymposium, Australia's largest river management conference, brings around 500 delegates from 40 countries to Brisbane from Monday to discuss river health, damming practices, drought and climate change.
 
WWF river dolphin initiative coordinator Anna Forslund said China's Yangtze river, the Mekong river in Cambodia, the Ganges river in India and the Indus river system in Pakistan were among the world's most endangered rivers as evidenced by their dwindling river dolphin populations.
 
Ms Forslund said many people had never heard of river dolphins, which were smaller than marine dolphins, had a longer snout and were often blind, but they were one of the most threatened species in the world with some populations now comprising between 1,000 to just a handful of wild creatures.

She said dolphin populations had been suffering from damming, overfishing, bad farming and mining practices, pollution and sewage since the 1970s.
 
"You can see the link, river dolphins are dependent on the water and the people are dependent on the water so the levels of toxicity is probably the same in people living there - low levels of dolphins means unhealthy water," she said.
 
Outgoing WWF global freshwater program director Jamie Pittock said the case study of river dolphins was bad news for humans.
 
"They're really the canaries of the rivers - if the river dolphin population is healthy then the river's healthy," Mr Pittock said.
 
"Millions and millions of people, well they're suffering now, and they'll suffer even more if the dolphins go extinct because extinction of the dolphins means that the rivers are terribly polluted, there's not enough water, fish are dying and people in these countries are drinking the water from these rivers."
 
He said many people did not realise humans were just as susceptible to the environment as animals.
 
He said around 50 WWF representatives were working in the countries to restore the health to the ecosystems by rescuing dolphins, providing farming education and reducing poverty so villagers had the resources to look after their own environments.
 
He said it was hoped outlining the program's successes would prompt more scientists and financial backers from Australia to get involved.
 
 
Quite a sad thing for these animals yet its also interesting to see how there populations are related to the conditions of the people around these rivers.
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  Quote Knights Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 03-Sep-2007 at 05:39
It's quite disturbing the rate at which these environments are being degraded. Several subspecies of River Dolphin in China (spp. Yangtze River Dolphin), S.E Asia ad Brazil (ssp. Amazonian River Dolphin) have gone extinct in the past couple of years. Overall populations are dwindling, and further disturbance to the fragile ecosystems will prove detrimental to not only the animals, but humans too. I find River (and all) Dolphins very fascinating - most types of River Dolphin are blind, as the murky waters deem sight near useless. Instead, they use echolocation, which can be detected underwater with a microphone (clicks and high pitched squeaks). Many kinds are pink, which is interesting. It wouldn't matter to them though, if they can't see themselves...

- Knights -
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  Quote Dolphin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 03-Sep-2007 at 06:14
Yeah, i've seen the pink ones..There's got to be some sort of evolutionary reason for it..I'm curious now!
 
The Yangtze dolphins are just another victim of China's rapid development, and the worst thing is that we can do nothing about it.. And dolphins and whales are now coming up the Thames in Lonson, but experts think that might actually be a bad omen, and not a sign of clean water. Times they are a changing
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  Quote Dolphin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 03-Sep-2007 at 10:58
Tried to find out why the dolphins are pink..
 
 
Why is the pink dolphin pink?
Not a lot is known about the dolphin's coloring because of their remoteness and rarity. It has been speculated they are pink for the same reason as pink flamingos. Like the dolphin, these marshland birds are not born pink but turn this color as they get older. A red pigment found in the muscle tissue of the crabs and shellfish theyear colors the flamingos. The colored molecule is not digested, yet is still absorbed in the birds' gizzard and accumulates in the shafts of the birds' growing feathers. Although this pigment is not visible in the raw meat of crustatia, it is the same pigment, which causes a prawn to turn pink when cooked.

Often flamingos in captivity are fed shellfish rich in this pigment in order to brighten their colorful appearance and heighten their appeal. Because the pink dolphin also feeds on these animals in the marshlands and flooded planes of the Amazon basin it is thought the same pigment accumulates in its skin as it gets older. I realize that now I am talking about the Pink Dolphin of the Amazon, however the have the same characteristics and coloring of the Chinese White Dolphin, just a different geographical location.
 

 
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