Monday 18 April 2022

Orcaella brevirostris: Irrawaddy River Dolphin extinct in Laos, less than 90 surviving in Cambodia.

The Irrawaddy River Dolphin, Orcaella brevirostris, is now officially extinct in Laos after the last surviving member of the species inhabiting a trans-border pool shared with Cambodia, died in February this year. The Dolphin, a male identified as ID#35, was found on a shore of the Chheuteal Pool in Stung Treng Province, Cambodia, having apparently died of injuries sustained when he became entangled in fishing nets on the Laos side of the pool. Irrawaddy River Dolphins are (or were) officially protected in both Laos and Cambodia, with a ban on gill nets, which are notoriously dangerous to small Cetaceans, in environments where they are found. However, while this rule was enforced on the Cambodian side of the border, where there are patrols by river guards and a public education program, part of Chheuteal Pool lies within Laos, where the rules were not enforced, and where Cambodian river guards are unable to operate.

 
ID#35, the last Irrawaddy River Dolphin living in the Chheuteal Pool spanning the border between Laos and Cambodia, found dead in February 2022. Phnom Penh Post.

In 1993 there were 17 Irrawaddy River Dolphins living in Chheuteal Pool, by 2009 this number had fallen to seven, by 2012 there were only six, in 2018 three Dolphins were recorded, and since 2021 ID#35 had been on his own. The Dolphin had been visibly unwell since becoming entangled in fishing gear in January, and was about half of his normal bodyweight when he died. Officials from the Cambodian Fisheries Administration and WWF Cambodia had considered moving him to a site lower in the Mekong Valley in Cambodia, where there is another population, but concluded that they lacked the expertise to do so. 

 
An Irrawaddy River Dolphin, Orcaella brevirostris, in a deep-water pool in Cambodia. Lor Kimsan/WWF Cambodia.

The Mekong Valley population in Cambodia is now thought to comprise only 89 individual Dolphins, with few other populations, in the Irrawaddy River in Myanmar, the Mahakam River in Indonesian Borneo, in Chilika Lagoon in India, in Malampaya Sound in the Philippines, and on the Trat coast in Thailand, each now thought to be less than 100 individuals, although a much larger population is present in the Sundarbans Mangrove Forest of Bangladesh, possibly numbering as many as 6000 individuals. The species is currently classified as Endangered under the terms of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species

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