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Encyclopedia > Lipotes
Chinese River Dolphin
Conservation status: Critical
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Subclass: Eutheria
Order: Cetacea
Suborder: Odontoceti
Family: Lipotidae
Genus: Lipotes
Species: L. vexillifer
Binomial name
Lipotes vexillifer
Miller, 1918

The Chinese River Dolphin (Lipotes vexillifer) is a freshwater dolphin found only in the Yangtze River in China. It is the only member of its genus. Other names for it include Baiji (白鱀 Pinyin: báijì), Beiji, Pai-chi (Wade-Giles), Whitefin Dolphin, Whiteflag Dolphin, Yangtze Dolphin, and Yangtze River Dolphin. It is nicknamed "the Goddess of the Yangtze River" (長江女神) in China.

Contents

Early history

Fossil records indicate that the dolphins migrated from the Pacific to Yangtze River 20,000 years ago. The dolphins are described during the Han Dynasty in a biological encyclopedia, Erya. It is estimated that there were 5,000 Baijis at that time. In 1978, the Chinese Academy of Sciences established the Freshwater Dolphin Research Centre (淡水海豚研究中心) as a branch of the Wuhan Institute of Hydrobiology.


The chronology of the species' rapid decline

  • 1979: The People's Republic of China declares Baiji endangered
  • 1983: National law declaring hunting Baiji illegal
  • 1986: Population at 300
  • 1990: Population at 200
  • 1997: Population at less than 50 (23 found)
  • 1998: 7 found

Its current population is difficult to estimate, but it is thought that there are at least thirteen individuals still alive. Needless to say, that is an extremely low number and it is therefore thought to be the world's most endangered cetacean. A captive specimen, a male named Qiqi (淇淇), was located at the Wuhan Institute of Hydrobiology from 1980 to July 14, 2002. Qiqi was discovered by a fisherman in Dongting Lake, and later became the sole resident of Baiji Dolphin Aquarium (白鱀豚水族馆) beside East Lake. There was a later captive, which died after living a year (1996 to 1997) in the Shishou Semi-natural Baiji Dolphin Sanctuary (石首半自然白鱀豚保护区) that had been empty since 1990. A female was found in Chongming Island near Shanghai in 1998, but she did not eat any provided food and starved to death within a month.


Conservation

The Baiji Dolphin Conservation Foundation of Wuhan (武汉白鱀豚保护基金), the first Chinese aquatic species protection organization, was founded in December 1996. The Foundation has gathered 1,383,924.35 CNY (about 10,034.02 USD) and have spent the financial resources on in vitro cell preservation and maintenance of the Baiji facilities, including the 1998-flooded Shishou Sanctuary.


Three Gorges Dam

The introduction of the Three Gorges Dam has altered the habitat of the Yangtze River Dolphin. It is almost certain that the species will be extinct by the end of the decade, if it is not already.


See also

External links

  • Convention on Migratory Species page on Baiji (http://www.wcmc.org.uk/cms/reports/small_cetaceans/data/L_vexillifer/L_vexillifer.htm)
  • Walker's Mammals of the World Online - Chinese River Dolphins (http://www.press.jhu.edu/books/walkers_mammals_of_the_world/cetacea/cetacea.lipotidae.lipotes.html)
  • Animal Info page on Baiji (http://www.animalinfo.org/species/cetacean/lipovexi.htm)
  • "Lipotes vexillifer: Baiji or Chinese River Dolphin" (http://www.cetacea.org/baiji.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Yangtze River Dolphin, Lipotes vexillifer at MarineBio.org (956 words)
Yangtze river dolphins, Lipotes vexillifer (Miller, 1918), (aka Chinese river dolphin, baiji, Pei C'hi, whitefin dolphin, whiteflag dolphin), are listed as critically endangered and are nearly extinct with the latest research unable to find any individuals in the wild.
The Yangtze river dolphin, Lipotes vexillifer, primarily feeds on river fish.
Yangtze river dolphins, Lipotes vexillifer, are one of the most highly endangered species in the cetacean family with an estimated population between 60-250 animals though recent surveys have not found a single individual.
ADW: Lipotes vexillifer: Information (1079 words)
Lipotes vexillifer, also known by the common name baiji, is found in China in the mouth of the Chang Jiang (Yangtze) to a point about 1900 km up the river, as well as in the middle and lower regions of the Quintangjiang River and in the Dongting and Poyang lakes.
It is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN's Red List of Threatened Species, it is listed as endangered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and it is on CITES appendix I. The total population is estimated at less than 100 animals; surveys in the late 1990s put the minimum population estimate at 13.
Programs are being established to breed Lipotes vexillifer in captivity, though no one has yet succeeded at housing wild baiji for long.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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