Want China Times, Xinhua 2015-04-14
Researchers freed 3,000 artificially bred Chinese sturgeons, a rare fish that has lived through the dinosaur age, into the country's longest river, the Yangtze, to save the species from extinction.
| Artificially-bred Chinese sturgeons are released into the Yangtze River, April 12. (Photo/Xinhua) |
Researchers freed 3,000 artificially bred Chinese sturgeons, a rare fish that has lived through the dinosaur age, into the country's longest river, the Yangtze, to save the species from extinction.
Staff with
the Chinese Sturgeons Research Institute released 500 such fish born in 2011
with a body length of 80 cm and 2,500 born in 2013, about 40 cm long each.
Advanced
methods were adopted to help scientists track them simultaneously, according to
Gao Yong, deputy head of the institute.
It was the
57th release of the rare fish.
Chinese
sturgeons, nicknamed "aquatic pandas," are listed as a wild creature
under state protection.
Due to
water projects, busy traffic and pollution, the number of wild Chinese
sturgeons which migrate to Gezhouba, Hubei province, for reproduction, has
fallen from about 1,000 in 1982 to about 50, according to estimates of Chinese
experts.
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