Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

(CN) Birds touch down for Chongming stay

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Birds touch down for Chongming stay

Peng Yanhan

Shanghai Daily

2006-12-09

 

Chongming is China's third biggest island after Taiwan and Hainan, but the rural

county is also home to Shanghai's largest wildlife sanctuary.

 

The Shanghai Chongming Dongtan National Natural Reserve is a sea of green that

is home to numerous animals, including that of the flying, swimming and land

variety, in an area simply known as Dongtan Wetland.

 

The island, formed by the mud and sand silt where the Yangtze River and East

China Sea collide, is growing by about 80 to 110 meters annually as it stretches

into the sea. It is estimated to have an area of 326 square kilometers, of which

241.55 square kilometers belong to the nature reserve.

 

At present, a total of 265 species of birds have been observed at the wetland,

34 of which are protected by the Chinese government.

 

In early November, shorebirds touched down and then departed on their migration

to Australia. As more wild geese, ducks and other birds spend the entire winter

here, their numbers peak late this month and in January. With the increased

population, now is the season for bird watching in Chongming. Visitors to

Dongtan National Bird Natural Reserve, those of the human variety, need to apply

for a permit at the management office at the site for entry.

 

This week, District Special looks at some of the inhabitants living temporarily

in Chongming County.

 

Shorebirds

 

The East Asian-Australian migratory shorebird flyway is one of eight major bird

migration routes in the world. The Dongtan Wetland is the birds' first station

when heading north and their last stop when flying back to Australia.

 

Their migration season in East Asia is March to May. They then fly back home

starting in August to enjoy the southern hemisphere's summer in Australia and

New Zealand starting this month. The shorebirds have a hard journey in spring

when they struggle to reach Western Siberia early to get a good nesting spot.

 

When flying home to the southern hemisphere, the birds have already bred and

their journey takes them about 90 days, twice as long as the flight north.

 

After the first 5,000 kilometers of their trip to Dongtan, the birds are in need

of food and refreshment to restore their weight, up to 60 percent of which has

been lost during 15 days of non-stop flying. They live on grass seed, shells,

snails and the tiny crabs found in Dongtan's pools, reeds and shallows.

 

Threatened species

 

Since the fall season, the Dongtan Wetland management has documented about

10,000 birds. It is estimated about 60,000 birds will make the site their

temporary home through March.

 

Nationally-protected birds here include tundra swans, hooded cranes and

black-faced spoonbills, among others. Each winter, more than 100 hooded cranes

fly to Dongtan and stay until late March.

 

In November, a black stork was spotted there for only the second time since

1998, the year the reserve was established. The animal is an endangered species

whose numbers are estimated to be no more 1,000 worldwide. The last record of

black storks appearing in Chongming was in 1929.

 

Banding of birds

 

There are more than 9,000 species of birds on earth and more than a third are

migratory - they migrate for the sole purpose of food and reproduction. Each

year, the birds fly thousands of kilometers between the northern and southern

hemispheres to get away from winter conditions. Islands and coastal beaches are

their prime choice for midway resting places.

 

To chart their migration, some birds are tagged with a metal ring on their leg,

a universally-accepted method for studying flight patterns and activity.

 

Starting from 2002, the Dongtan reserve set up a database for each banded bird,

sharing the information with the National Bird Banding Center of China and

similar organizations worldwide. The data can reveal valuable ecological

analysis. This year, the reserve tagged more than 7,000 birds, the most among

any other banding spot in the world.

 

Working with birds

 

Researcher Ma Qiang has worked at Dongtan Wetland since graduating from East

China Normal University last year. While most of his classmates chose cellular

and molecular biology, the 25-year-old Qinghai Province native chose zoology as

he preferred to work in the wild with animals, instead of doing lab experiments.

 

Each 15 days, Ma and his Dongtan colleagues venture out into the wetland to

carry out their observations. Calculating the number of birds can be a tough

task as migratory birds move in large groups, there is no way to count them one

after another. Researchers must identify a certain flying area first, and divide

it into tens of smaller equal areas to get an approximate count.

 

Environmental protection

 

In the past 20 years, nearly half of the waterfowl species in Dongtan have seen

their numbers reduced. This could be contributed to the fact that since 1987 the

mud flat has dwindled by about 20 percent.

 

As waterfowl are essential to evaluating a wetland's quality, its biodiversity,

which includes all forms of life, is drawing more and public awareness.

 

In 2002, the Dongtan Wetland joined the Convention on Wetland of International

Importance Especially as Waterfowl Habitat - short for the Ramsar Convention -

and was designated world Ramar Site 1144.

 

The reserve is now planning more activities to arouse public awareness on

environmental protection. It intends to launch a student education area in the

wetland by the end of May.

 

Address: Dongwang Road

 

Getting there: Take the ferry from Baoyang Port in Baoshan District to Baozhen

Port. Ferries depart regularly. From Chongming, take the Chenhai Road eastward

to Dongtan. There is no public bus so a taxi is the most common mode of

transport.

 

http://www.shanghaidaily.com/art/2006/12/09/299324/Birds_touch_down_for_Chongmin\

g_stay.htm

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...