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Wildlife experts try to rescue lost white dolphin in south China

Xinhua, February 9, 2017 Adjust font size:

Wildlife experts in south China are trying to rescue an endangered white dolphin that is in worsening health after mistakenly swimming into a freshwater river a week ago.

The Chinese white dolphin, about 30 years old, equivalent to 70 human years, swam into the Baisha River, a tributary of the Pearl River in Jiangmen, Guangdong Province Feb.1. The animal is in a stretch about 100 km from the river's estuary.

The species is under China's top protection list.

A rescue team comprising personnel from local nature reserve and fishery authorities has attempted several times to drive the creature back to sea but has had no success.

"As it is too old and has been stranded for many days, the skin of the dolphin is festering and its health is deteriorating ... its moving area is shrinking," said Feng Kangkang, a worker with Jiangmen Chinese White Dolphin Nature Reserve, on Thursday.

Driving it back to sea should cause the animal minimum harm, but the dolphin has repeatedly swam back into the river due to weakening bodily functions, according to Feng.

The team is watching the dolphin around-the-clock through devices and recording its health condition, according to the Guangdong provincial ocean and fishery department.

White dolphins rely on echolocation systems to identify the location of objects in water, but when they get old or suffer disease they are likely to run aground.

Each year, Guangdong reports two to three cases of senior white dolphins mistakenly entering freshwater rivers.

Dubbed the "giant pandas of the sea," Chinese white dolphins are mainly scattered in a few coastal areas and exist only in small numbers, with about 2,000 detected at the mouth of the Pearl River. Endi