The Indian government has announced that it plans to develop a program to raise the population of its native Ganges river dolphin (Platanista gangetica gagnetica), a subspecies of the South Asian river dolphin. During a question and answer session Jairam Ramesh, India’s Environment and Forests Minister, said that the dolphin’s current population was estimated at 2,000 to 3,000 individuals in the Ganges. However, other estimates have placed it lower.
The South Asian river dolphin is currently listed as Endangered by the IUCN Red List, although it has been difficult for researchers to conduct a rigorous population survey. The species range has shrunken dramatically over the past century, as well it is currently threatened by dams, canals, barges, pollution, and entanglement in fishing gear.
As if to highlight such the impacts of such threats five Indus river dolphins(Platanista gangetica minor)—the second subspecies of the South Asian river dolphin—were found dead in January in Pakistan. Autopsies are currently being carried out on three of them, but it is believed they succumbed to either entanglement in nets or toxic chemical pollution.
Already, one of the world’s four freshwater dolphin species has likely gone extinct. In 2006 a survey for the Yangtze River dolphin, or baiji, failed to find a single surviving animal. The baiji suffered from many of the same impacts that the South Asian river dolphins face.
The Ganges river dolphin is India’s national aquatic animal.
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