Winds of change blow for finless porpoise


Increased efforts made in Jiangsu to save endangered species
While most people rely on weather forecasts to tell them if strong gusts are on the horizon, Li Huarong can make accurate predictions just by watching finless porpoises in the Yangtze River.
"If many porpoises emerge together and a large percentage of their bodies breaches the water's surface, it indicates that strong winds are coming," he said.
"We used to refer to that phenomenon as 'finless porpoises worship the wind'," said Li, director of the finless porpoise protection association in Yangzhou, Jiangsu province.
"We had many finless porpoises in the Yangtze River. The fishermen gained enough experience to tell strong winds were coming by watching the porpoises. But now, you have to be lucky to see them."
Li said there are about 30 finless porpoises on the Yangzhou section of the Yangtze, especially near Sanjiangying. He and his team filmed some of the porpoises swimming with their heads above water on Aug 2, just before Typhoon Jongdari, the twelfth such weather event to hit the area this year, made landfall in the region.
Hu Chunbin, a member of the association, said it started to regularly patrol the Yangzhou section of the Yangtze in mid-July to protect the rare species, which remains in danger of extinction.
- AI risks, collaborative defense focus of Kunming cyber forum
- Draft prison law emphasizes fair treatment for inmates
- Students welcome social media account of RUC's Party secretary
- China Daily app announces winners of limited-edition military models
- China formulates, revises 150 sets of administrative regulations in 14th Five-Year Plan period
- China's first Sino-Russian cross-border marathon held in Heihe