Why over 200,000 Chinese sturgeons have been released into the Yangtze River
2022-10-18 16:10:18
CGTN | April9, 2022
Over200,000 artificially bred Chinese sturgeons were released into the Yangtze River on Saturday as part of a project to conserve the critically endangered species.
The sturgeons were bred by the Chinese Sturgeon Research Institute of China Three Gorges Corporation (CTG). The release – off Yichang City in central China's Hubei Province – was the second on such a large scale since the Yangtze River Protection Law took effect on March 1 last year.
The fish is considered a national treasure, like the giant panda, but its population in the wild is on the edge of extinction. According to Jiang Wei from the Chinese Sturgeon Research Institute, releasing the artificially bred fish into the river on this scale could have a positive impact on the recovery of the species.
From 1984, when the releasing was first conducted, until today, nearly 5.3 million sturgeons have been released into the Yangtze by the Chinese Sturgeon Research Institute. But several decades of hard work have seen little reward so far.
Over200,000 artificially bred Chinese sturgeons were released into the Yangtze River on Saturday as part of a project to conserve the critically endangered species.
The sturgeons were bred by the Chinese Sturgeon Research Institute of China Three Gorges Corporation (CTG). The release – off Yichang City in central China's Hubei Province – was the second on such a large scale since the Yangtze River Protection Law took effect on March 1 last year.
The fish is considered a national treasure, like the giant panda, but its population in the wild is on the edge of extinction. According to Jiang Wei from the Chinese Sturgeon Research Institute, releasing the artificially bred fish into the river on this scale could have a positive impact on the recovery of the species.
From 1984, when the releasing was first conducted, until today, nearly 5.3 million sturgeons have been released into the Yangtze by the Chinese Sturgeon Research Institute. But several decades of hard work have seen little reward so far.
A Chinese sturgeon is released into the river, April 9, 2022. /CTG
Conservation requires time and effort
"For now, we haven't seen any obvious effect because the released number needs to be expanded and increased, and the whole natural environment (of the river and sea) also needs to be improved," said Jiang, who has studied the Chinese sturgeon for years.
Questions have been raised about whether artificial breeding can save the species. Over 200,000 Chinese sturgeons look like a big quantity, but considering the natural survival rate, only a small number of sturgeons may successfully reach the sea and migrate back to reproduce.
Chinese sturgeons can live for 40 years. The fish head to their spawning beds in the Yangtze River in autumn to lay their eggs. After five to six days, the fertilized eggs grow up and become fish, then they swim all the way down to the sea to spend most of their lives. It is only when the sturgeons reach sexual maturity at the age of about 14 that they start to migrate back to rivers for procreation.
The research journey