HANOI — From a devilish-looking bat to a frog that sings like a bird,
scientists have identified 126 new species in the Greater Mekong area,
the WWF said in a new report detailing discoveries in 2011.
But
from forest loss to the construction of major hydropower projects on the
Mekong River, existing threats to the region's biodiversity mean many
of the new species are already struggling to survive, the conservation
group warned.
"The good news is new discoveries. The bad news is
that it is getting harder and harder in the world of conservation and
environmental sustainability," Nick Cox, manager of WWF-Greater Mekong's
Species Programme, told AFP.
Some 126 species were newly recorded
last year in the Greater Mekong region, which consists of Thailand,
Cambodia, Myanmar, Vietnam, Laos and the southwestern Chinese province
of Yunnan.
Some, such as the Beelzebub tube-nosed bat discovered
in Vietnam, depend on tropical forests for survival and so are
especially vulnerable to deforestation.
In just four decades, 30 percent of the Greater Mekong's forests have disappeared, the report says.
Others,
such as a short-tailed python species found in Myanmar are more at risk
from illegal hunting for meat, skins, and the exotic pet trade, the
report said.
"Poaching for the illegal wildlife trade poses one of
the greatest threats to the existence of many species across Southeast
Asia," Cox said in a statement accompanying the report.
The list,
dominated by plants, included 21 reptiles and five amphibians, such as a
frog that sings and another that has black and white eye patterns that
look like yin and yang symbols.
The WWF said that while the number
of new species discovered was testament to the region's astounding
biodiversity, there had been some "worrying developments" that posed a
threat to their future.
WWF singled out Laos' determination to
construct the Xayaburi dam on the main stream of the Mekong River as a
significant threat to the river's "extraordinary biodiversity" and the
livelihoods of more than 60 million people.
"The Mekong River supports levels of aquatic biodiversity second only to the Amazon River," according to Cox.
"The
Xayaburi dam would prove an impassable barrier for many fish species,
signalling the demise for wildlife already known and as yet
undiscovered," he added.
The Mekong River supports around 850 fish species and the world's most intensive inland fishery, the report said.
Last
month, Laos said it had begun work on the controversial multi-billion
dollar Xayaburi dam, defying objections from environmentalists in its
bid to become a regional energy hub.
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