Why in the news?
- A recent study on five deceased Indus River dolphins found hundreds of microplastic particles in each individual dolphin.
Indus River Dolphins
- Distribution:
- Historically spread across the Indus River and its tributaries.
- In India, a small remnant population exists in the Beas River (Punjab), protected as the state aquatic animal of Punjab.
- Features
- It is an endangered freshwater cetacean, found mainly in the Indus River system of Pakistan, with a small population in Punjab, India.
- It is a subspecies of the South Asian river dolphin.
- Locally known as “Bhulan” in Pakistan and sometimes called the blind dolphin due to its extremely poor eyesight.
- Due to the poor vision, it relies on echolocation.
- Well-suited for turbid, silt-laden waters.
- Threats
- Habitat Fragmentation: Barrages and dams divide river stretches, blocking migration.
- Water Extraction: For irrigation and agriculture reduces flow.
- Pollution: Industrial waste, agricultural runoff, and plastic pollution.
- Poaching & Bycatch: Sometimes caught accidentally in fishing nets.
- Noise Pollution: Interferes with echolocation.
- Conservation Status:
- IUCN Red List: Endangered.
- CITES: Appendix I.
- WPA, 1972: Schedule I.
- Conservation Efforts:
- International Efforts:
- Transboundary cooperation under CMS (Convention on Migratory Species).
- Recognized under the Global Freshwater Dolphin Initiative.
- Indian Efforts:
- Beas Conservation Reserve (2017) for dolphin protection.
- Community participation through awareness campaigns.
- Punjab declared it the state aquatic animal (2019).
- International Efforts: