For millions of years, the Yangtze River Dolphins (also called
“Baiji”) existed in the main channel of the Yangtze River in China.
Sharing their natural habitat with small populations of finless
porpoises, these nearly-blind river dolphins would swim strong
against currents, gather in congregations of ten or more, and use
their sonar to navigate their way around their world.
Their
beauty, coupled with very low numbers, captured hearts of the local
people, scientists, and the few others who were aware of their
existence. It became a battle in conservation to keep the Baiji
alive. But on December 13, 2006, that fight came officially to an
end.
According to Associated Press writer Charles Hutzler, in
his recent article, a Swiss naturalist named August Pfluger,
stated: “The Baiji is functionally extinct. We might have missed
one or two animals, but it won’t survive in the wild.” Pfluger,
formerly an economist, aided in the creation of an international
expedition to conserve the animals. “We are all incredibly sad.” He
added.
A search spanning six weeks for the endangered dolphin
came up unsuccessful, confirming the fears of many
conservationists.
“For the baiji,” Hutzler writes, “the
culprit was a degraded habitat – busy ship traffic, which confounds
the sonar the dolphin uses to find its food, and overfishing and
pollution in the Yangtze waters of eastern China.”
Baiji.org,
a small group of specialists, scientists, and conservation experts
dedicating to protecting the species, reiterated the results.
“During the six-week expedition scientists from six nations
desperately searched the Yangtze in vain.”
The now-extinct
dolphin species was restricted in its final days to the middle and
lower areas of the Yangtze River, which is located just west of the
East China Sea.
“The disappearance of the baiji holds up a
mirror with a tragic reflection,” Pfluger says on a Baiji.org blog
entry, “a reflection of humanity’s inability to effectively
prioritize on the basis of needs.”
The Baiji was discovered by
Gerrit S. Miller Jr. in 1918. Scientists of the western world were
unaware that it was even present until the early 1900s. As time
passed, and civilization grew in the area surrounding its habitat,
the Baiji began to disappear. When the 20th century ended, the
Baiji became the world’s most endangered cetacean.
So little
was known about these dolphins in the wild. A captive Baiji at the
Wuhan Institute of Hydrobiology has provided science with nearly
all known facts about their behavior, lifestyle, and general
appearance.
The Baiji had a stout body, a long slim beak, and
a small head. Their eyes were very diminutive, hence their reliance
on sonar, and the dorsal fin was low, dull-peaked, and triangular
in shape. They had large flippers with curved tips. Their
coloration reflects that of the bottlenose dolphin, grayish, with
whitish bellies.
It is estimated that they preyed on fish near
3½ inches in length, and would typically shy away from prey more
than nine ounces in weight. To consume their prey, the Baiji had
30-34 pairs of teeth in the upper jaw, and 32-36 pairs in the
lower.
“Let us also see the tragic fate of the baiji as a
signal for the future,” Pfluger reflects, “and an important
milestone: It is time for action.”
For conservationists
worldwide, the loss of the beautiful Baiji is a bitter and stinging
defeat. Especially for Pfluger, who began his journey to protect
the animals in 1997, when the Chinese government invited him to
participate in a Baiji-Expedition. “I’ve had the amazing privilege
to observe a living Baiji in Yangtze. …there were at least 13
animals then [in 1997] – back when something could still be
done.”
The demise of the Baiji marks the first time a large
marine water-dwelling mammal was driven to extinction since the
Carribbean monk seal died off in the 1950s because of overfishing
and hunting.
The Baiji’s scientific name, Lipotes vexillifer,
carries a tragically fitting translation. Its first term originates
in the Greek language, and means “one who is left
behind.”
[2263]SOURCESHutzler,
Charles. “Rare white dolphin declared as extinct.” News.Yahoo.com
13 Dec 2006. 13 Dec 2006.
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061213/ap_on_sc/china_dolphin_extinction>
Pfluger,
August. The Race Goes On! 2006. Baiji.org. 13 Dec 2006.
<http://blog.baiji.org/2006/12/13/the-race-goes-on/>
Reeves,
Randall R. “Yangtze River Dolphin.” Guide to Marine Mammals of the
World. New York: Chanticleer Press, Inc., 2002. 310-313.