The story appears on

Page A5

April 2, 2016

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Nation

Lost migratory crane a godsend for ecologists

IT has a Facebook page, two books and its own brand of rice. A Siberian crane that landed in Taiwan after getting lost on migration over a year ago even made international headlines when it was found wandering outside a train station.

But to conservationists, the crane is more than just a flash-in-the-pan media star. It is a godsend in their push for environmentally friendly farming as the island’s birds suffer at the hands of development and pollution.

Taiwan is a mid-point stop on one of the world’s eight major migratory routes and a wintering ground for numerous waterbirds from China’s mainland Siberia, Japan and Korea on their way further south.

However, in some areas of the island waterbird numbers are down due to the destruction of habitats.

There had never been any reported sightings of the rare white crane in Taiwan until December 2014 when the crane first made the wetlands after taking a wrong turn on its migratory route.

It hit the headlines again last winter when it was found wandering around a subway station in Taipei and was returned once more to Jinshan.

The Siberian crane is on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s red list of critically endangered species with an estimated population of less than 4,000.

“I didn’t expect the crane to stay. I thought it would fly away very soon,” said farmer Huang Cheng-chun, whose rice and lotus field is nicknamed “little crane base” since the bird took residence there.

“When I work, the crane follows me around. It’s like a friend to me. It’s been helpful by eating a lot of apple snails (a pest) in the field.”

As the crane helped rid them of pests, more farmers in the area agreed to go green to protect the bird’s health, a boost for ecologists, who had until then been struggling to persuade them to stop using pesticides, rat poisons and herbicide.

Last year, pre-orders for “Jin Ho rice” — which combines Jinshan and the Chinese word for crane “Ho” — were sold out months before the harvest.

The eco-friendly farming area in Jinshan has now expanded from 3.5 to 10 hectares.

“It’s inevitable that the bird will leave,” said Liao Jen-hui, director of the Taiwan Ecological Engineering Development Foundation.

“We hope that by the time it’s gone, eco-friendly farming and the Jin Ho rice brand will be well established.”

Thanks to safer farming methods, the Chingshui wetland now has an abundance of food for birds and more migratory flocks stopping by, including the black kite, rarely seen there previously, the foundation said.

But elsewhere in Taiwan, habitat destruction caused by industrial development and pollution is taking its toll.

While the number of endangered black-faced spoonbills hit a record total of 2,060 in January this year, only 14 were seen on the northeastern coast of Yilan, half the number from 2014, the Chinese Wild Bird Federation said.

The decrease was likely linked to wetlands being converted into aquaculture ponds, said Tsai Shih-peng, president of the federation.

In Changhua county, the number of far eastern curlew has dropped from around 3,000 in 1993 to 600 in recent years since a huge coastal industrial park was set up, he added.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend