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November 30, 2015

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Hong Kong may be losing its pink dolphins

As Hong Kong seeks to expand its international airport and with a major new bridge project underway, campaigners warn that the dwindling number of much-loved pink dolphins in surrounding waters may disappear altogether.

Conservationists say their repeated concerns have fallen on deaf ears, with what they describe as a 鈥渞apid鈥 decline of the mammal in the past few decades.

The Chinese white dolphin 鈥 popularly known as the pink dolphin due to its color 鈥 draws scores of tourists daily to the waters north of Hong Kong鈥檚 Lantau Island.

But despite the affection felt toward the dolphin, campaigners say there may soon be none left.

The proposed construction of a third runway at Hong Kong鈥檚 busy Chek Lap Kok airport could be the nail in the coffin, they say.

鈥淲e think that if that project goes ahead, then it will probably drive the dolphin away from Hong Kong waters,鈥 said Samuel Hung, chairman of the Hong Kong Dolphin Conservation Society, who has been going out to sea at least twice a week to monitor dolphin activity for almost 20 years.

鈥淚n some ways it seems like we are pushing them closer and closer to the edge of the cliff and if we鈥檙e making that final push, they will be gone forever. I think now is the time to get our act together.鈥

Hung says there are only around 60 dolphins left in Hong Kong waters 鈥 a drop from 158 in 2003.

鈥淭he dolphin decline is caused by a number of factors, including overfishing and environmental pollution ... but I think the major contribution is coming from the increase of high-speed ferry traffic,鈥 Hung said.

Dolphin habitats have also been affected by the ongoing construction of a 50-kilometer bridge connecting Hong Kong to the gambling enclave of Macau.

The bridge looms on the horizon behind the village of Tai O, on the western tip of Lantau, from where dozens of dolphin tours go out daily.

鈥淪ince the construction of the bridge in 2012 the situation has worsened,鈥 says Hung, who blames land reclamation encroaching on dolphin habitats and continuing construction creating disturbance.

鈥淧ollution is quite serious in the air and water ... We worry about the marine life being affected,鈥 said Hong Kong bank worker Yeung Ka-yan, 30, after taking a short boat trip.

鈥淲e were a little disappointed,鈥 added her boyfriend, a 26-year-old chef from Taiwan, after failing to spot any dolphins.

Tourist boat operator Wong Yung-kan, who was born in Tai O and has lived most of his life there, said residents used to dislike the dolphins because they ate catch from fishermen鈥檚 nets, when fishing was the village鈥檚 most important trade.

鈥淣ow the fishing industry has reduced in size, we have had to change our line of work from fishing to taking tourists out on boats to see dolphins,鈥 the 67-year-old said.

Dolphin-watching accounts for 10 percent of Tai O鈥檚 tourism business.

鈥淥f course we want them to remain here ... the tourists will be happier and we鈥檒l be happier as well,鈥 adds Wong.

He is optimistic. 鈥淭hese natural things won鈥檛 disappear ... if you are not actively eliminating them, then they won鈥檛 go away.鈥

The government said the potential impact the proposed third-runway could have on the pink dolphins had been 鈥減roperly assessed and addressed.鈥

鈥淭o compensate for the permanent loss of Chinese white dolphin habitats arising from the land formation works, the designation of a new marine park of approximately 24 square kilometers in the waters north of the third-runway project has been proposed,鈥 an agriculture, fisheries and conservation department statement said.


 

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