October 21, 2015 โ A sixth of the globeโs fish catch comes from waters off Chinaโs coasts. Yet the nationโs industrial push is imperiling that 15 million-ton annual haul. Fully 60 percent of the Chinaโs wetlands have been paved over for development projectsโand much of whatโs left is under threat of more of the same.
Thatโs the conclusion of a jarring new report (hat tip to the New York Times) by the US-based Paulson Institute, the Chinese State Forestry Administration, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Coastal wetlands are the breeding and feeding grounds for fish, migratory birds, and other creatures. They also buffer coastal cities from the seaโs caprices by absorbing energy from storm-roiled wavesโan increasingly important function as climate change proceeds apace. Over the last half century, the report found, China has developed more than half of the coastal wetlands in its temperate northern regions and nearly three-quarters of the mangrove forests and 80 percent of coral reefs along its southern coast. Losses accelerated between 2003 and 2013โin that time frame alone, Chinaโs total coastal wetlands shrank by about 23 percent.
Read the full story at Mother Jones