Skip to Content Facebook Feature Image

Sealing efforts enhanced to close dike breach at Dongting Lake

China

China

China

Sealing efforts enhanced to close dike breach at Dongting Lake

2024-07-08 21:43 Last Updated At:22:37

Sealing work has intensified to close a dike breach on Monday at Dongting Lake, China's second-largest freshwater lake in central China's Hunan Province.

At 17:48 on Friday, a dike burst at Tuanzhou Township, Huarong County, administered by the city of Yueyang in Hunan Province, causing flooding in the area. The breach was initially about 10 meters wide but later expanded to as wide as around 226 meters.

On Monday, the emergency response team at the Dongting Lake front line further accelerated the progress of breach-sealing operations. The team strengthened the on-site transportation of emergency materials such as blocks and steel cages. Trucks, barges and other transportation vehicles carried plugging materials and dropped them into the breach 24 hours a day.

Under the arrangement of the Yangtze River Water Conservancy Commission of the Ministry of Water Resources, the Three Gorges Reservoir and other basin control reservoirs continued to intercept and store flood water to accelerate the rate of water withdrawal in the middle and lower reaches of the main stream and Dongting Lake.

The National Development and Reform Commission has allocated 200 million yuan (around 27.5 million U.S. dollars) of central budget investment to support the post-disaster emergency recovery work in areas affected by the dike breach.

Elsewhere in the country, emergency rescue forces were also tested by the heavy rains that hit multiple areas in Henan, Shandong and Sichuan Provinces.

Starting from Sunday afternoon, heavy to torrential rains occurred in parts of western and central and northern Henan. Zhengzhou municipal administration, traffic police, sanitation and other departments dispatched flood prevention personnel to drain the logging water and divert traffic.

Heavy rainfall began yesterday in southern Shandong, with torrential rains hitting parts of the province. The Sihe River Dam was damaged by the heavy rainfall, and part of the bank collapsed. Rescue workers were quickly dispatched to carry out emergency rescue work. So far, about 2,400 people have been evacuated.

In Langzhong City, Sichuan Province, heavy rains caused waterlogging on many national highways, provincial highways and rural roads, and trees fell on some sections. Rescue personnel were dispatched to clear hidden dangers and conduct a comprehensive inspection of the drainage system and flood control facilities.

Sealing efforts enhanced to close dike breach at Dongting Lake

Sealing efforts enhanced to close dike breach at Dongting Lake

Next Article

New technologies help monitor endangered snub-nosed monkeys in Yunnan

2024-10-06 18:53 Last Updated At:19:07

The population of golden-haired monkeys, or snub-nosed monkeys, at a reserve in southwest China's Yunnan Province has been steadily increasing as conservation authorities adopt new technologies to protect wildlife and boost biodiversity.

The 2,821-square-kilometer Baima Snow Mountain National Nature Reserve sits in the core zone of the Three Parallel Rivers of the Yunnan Protected Areas, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The reserve stands as an exemplary model for the province's efforts to protect the Yunnan snub-nosed monkeys, an endangered species unique to China.

New digital technologies are playing an increasingly vital role in this initiative. Among them is a set of weight scales readable by remote control, which were added to the national nature reserve this year to more effectively monitor the health status of the monkeys.

A total of 11 new baby monkeys were born this year, said staff, adding that their current weights are within the normal range and they are all in good health.

In addition to monitoring the monkey's weight changes, they collect and detect the feces of the primates every season to learn about their physical condition, said Lai Jiandong, head of the wildlife rescue station at the reserve.

Conservationists also use cutting-edge advances to collect exhaustive data on the monkeys' habitat.

"The technology we are utilizing is laser radar, and its advantage is that it can create a three-dimensional reconstruction of the Yunnan snub-nosed monkeys' habitat. This enables us to assess the habitat quality of the monkeys over a larger area, compared with traditional remote sensing methods, which rely solely on imagery or ground-based manual surveys. The traditional methods cannot reflect the three-dimensional habitat of the Yunnan snub-nosed monkeys," explained Yang Haitao, an associate researcher at the Institute of Remote Sensing and GIS under Peking University.

This year, the nature reserve has also reintroduced 40 Yunnan snub-nosed monkeys to the wild in order to promote genetic exchange. The group of 40 Yunnan golden hair monkeys includes three families and one group of males, with the youngest being just three months old.

Data showed that the Yunnan snub-nosed monkey population in the Baima Snow Mountain National Nature Reserve has increased from nearly 500 individuals when the nature reserve was established in 1983 to roughly 2,500 individuals at present, making up 65 percent of the total population of the species in China.

Dubbed "elves of the snow mountain", Yunnan snub-nosed monkeys live in the mountainous forests of Yunnan and the neighboring Tibet Autonomous Region. They are listed as national first-class rare and endangered protected species in China and as vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List.

New technologies help monitor endangered snub-nosed monkeys in Yunnan

New technologies help monitor endangered snub-nosed monkeys in Yunnan

Recommended Articles