First organised census to estimate Indus dolphin begins in India

IANS  |  New Delhi 

Looking towards the conservation of Dolphins -- one of the world's rarest mammals -- government along with WWF-are conducting a first organised census, officials said on Thursday.

Officials from the Department of Forests and Wildlife Preservation, and WWF-are currently working in two teams and will estimate their population over the five-day exercise.

"We are trying to establish their near accurate population as to plan their conservation accordingly. It is the first organised census, previously we had merely spotted them," Kuldeep Kumar, Chief Wildlife Warden,

According to Suresh Babu, Director River Wetland and Water Policy, WWF-India, the most flourishing population of the dolphin, platanista gangetica minor, is found across where their numbers are estimated around 1,800 over a stretch of 1,500 km of the

In India, a tiny population survives in this small stretch of Experts say they were also found in Sutlej decades back, however, river pollution is believed to be a major cause of their extinction from the habitat.

"Dolphins are a key indicator of a river health if a river is healthy the dolphins will be there and if not, we have the example of Sutlej," told IANS.

According to the (IUCN), construction of critical barrage is associated with the large-scale decline in the area of occupancy, "which have not ceased".

IUCN suspects the population size of the Indus has reduced by more than 50 per cent since 1944.

A blind species that communicates through echo like a Bat does, Indus dolphins are one of the seven freshwater dolphins found across the world.

--IANS

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First Published: Thu, May 03 2018. 14:24 IST