Off the wire
WHO commends Fiji for tobacco control efforts  • China taps into university students in developing positive Internet culture  • Indian PM urges supporters not to use abusive language on social media  • "Jurassic World" stays atop box office charts  • Plunge in dairy prices prompts warnings for New Zealand economy  • Australia's Great Barrier Reef spared "in-danger" classification: UNESCO  • V-Day parade plans show China's determination to defend peace: Bangladeshi experts  • Foreign exchange rates in Thailand  • Cambodian FM to visit Thailand next week  • New Zealand-Canada double tax agreement to help investors  
You are here:   Home

China released endangered alligators into wild

Xinhua, July 2, 2015 Adjust font size:

Twelve Chinese alligators bred in captivity were released into the wild on Thursday in east China's Anhui Province.

It is the second batch of Chinese alligators to be returned to their natural habitat this year by the Anhui Yangtze Alligator Reserve in Xuancheng City, bringing the number of released alligators to 78, according to Wu Rong, head of the administrative bureau of the reserve.

Twelve Chinese alligators were returned to the wild in May.

The reserve began releasing the reptiles in 2003. Research shows they have generally adapted well and have begun to reproduce, Wu said.

Statistics show they have laid 158 eggs and successfully incubated 80 of them.

The female to male sex ratio of the released alligators is 2:1 and their DNA was tested before release to avoid inbreeding. All carry radio transmitters.

China listed the Chinese alligator as a first-class protected animal in 1972. There are only about 150 in the wild.

In 2002, the reserve started restoring and constructing alligator habitats threatened by humans and pollution. It now has more than 15,000 captive alligators. Endi