Panorama
 
 
 
 

RECONNECTING LAKES HELPS RESTORE THE YANGTZE


Environmental Panorama
International
June of 2006

07 Jun 2006 - Anqing, China – A WWF project has resulted in the simultaneous opening of several sluice gates that are reconnecting eight lakes to the Yangtze River. The move is the first step in restoring natural ecological processes that will help heal the degraded Central and Lower wetland ecosystem.

"Lakes will once again be able to act as natural sponges, absorbing water during the flood seasons, releasing water during the dry season, and purifying water all year around," Dr Zhu Jiang, WWF-HSBC Yangtze Programme Officer with WWF China.

"Large-scale reconnection of the Central and Lower Yangtze will be of tremendous benefit to both wildlife and people who depend on the Yangtze’s natural resources."

The Yangtze River is the world’s third longest, with its basin covering an area of 1.8 million km2. The vast area of the Central and Lower Yangtze once acted as a natural sponge to soak up flood waters during the rainy season. However, dyke and embankment building along the river has seriously disrupted natural processes across the basin. The natural links of more than 100 lakes have been cut off from the Yangtze during the last five decades due to unsustainable practices such as land reclamation, dyke building, and over populated urban settlements along its waters. This has greatly disrupted the Yangtze, once a vibrant, complex network of river, wetlands and lakes.

WWF believes that a practical solution is to reform the existing sluice gate (dyke gate) management regime, which currently mainly serves agricultural needs and addresses flood control issues in reclaimed lake areas.

Previous sluice gate openings in other parts of China, such as in Lake Zhangdu, have resulted in a total fish yield increase of 17 per cent in 2005. Fourteen native species have been successfully introduced into the lake and nine fish species that had previously died out in the area have returned.

"Better sluice gate management, together with addressing farmers’ livelihoods, fisheries and water quality, will help heal degraded wetland and aquatic ecosystems in the Yangtze," Zhu added.

To achieve these goals and provide solutions for China’s decision-makers, the WWF-HSBC Yangtze Programme has been working to restore the "web of life" along the Yangtze River since 2002. In addition to re-linking isolated lakes and introducing fish fry at Zhangdu Lake, Hong Lake and Tian’e-Zhou Oxbow in Hubei Province and Baidang Lake in Anhui Province, the project is also helping to restore wetland habitats for displaced migratory and endemic birds and fish, reduce water pollution and establish key protected areas for the region’s most endangered species. The project is introducing sustainable alternative livelihoods, such eco-fisheries, eco-tourism, and growth of aquatic vegetables, for local communities.

END NOTES:

• Established in 1865 in Hong Kong and Shanghai, the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC) Limited has always been involved in the welfare of the communities it serves. Since it began to track donations for mainland China, more than RMB150 million covering the areas of disaster relief, community welfare, vocational training, environment and education has been recorded. In 2002, the HSBC Group established the five-year Investing in Nature Programme, which supports a range of conservation initiatives around the world. The WWF-HSBC Yangtze Programme is one of these initiatives.

• The WWF-HSBC freshwater initiative seeks to restore natural ecological processes between the Yangtze and obstructed lakes. Last year, the initiative was instrumental in the opening of four isolated Yangtze River lakes, benefiting 448km2 of wetlands. One year later, 800km2 of Anqing lakes have been connected with the Yangtze. WWF’s initiative has also helped shaped new national aquatic resource policy. On 14 February 2006, the "restore river-lake connections and adopt fish fry introduction practice" was incorporated into a national policy to conserve aquatic resources.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship (Wu Hongyun)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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