Good news for the Critically Endangered Baer’s Pochard – winter survey in China finds 2,555 individuals

It’s heartwarming to be able to report some good news about a critically endangered species!  On 19th April 2025, the National Forest and Grassland Administration (NFGA) published the results of the first comprehensive and synchronous winter survey of Baer’s Pochard (Aythya baeri 青头潜鸭 Qīng tóu qián yā) in China.  

The survey, undertaken by  recorded that the population of the Baer’s Pochard in China reached 2,555, a significant increase from the approximately 1,000 reported in 2012.

The survey was led and organized by the China Baer’s Pochard Conservation and Monitoring Working Group at Beijing Forestry University, under the guidance of NFGA, and involved over 400 individual surveyors at 212 sites in 21 Provinces that hold wintering populations of this species.

According to Professor Ding Changqing, Chair of the East Asian-Australasian Flyway Partnership and the China Baer’s Pochard Task Force, this is the first comprehensive wintering population census of Baer’s Pochard based and provides a strong scientific basis for formulating targeted conservation measures. It also provides important data support for the IUCN Red List to update the global population change trend.

Among the sites covered by the survey, there are 16 sites with a population of over 30 individuals (see Table 1 below), involving a total of 2,136 individuals, accounting for 83.6% of the total. Monitoring and protection of these sites must be a priority.  Among the wintering habitats, freshwater lakes dominate, accounting for 71.51% of all habitats, followed by rivers and ponds. The investigation also discovered that wintering Baer’s Pochard prefer small abandoned fish ponds and medium to small-sized lakes with rich vegetation.

Table 1: the most important wintering sites for Baer’s Pochard in China.

 

Province

Site name and location

1

Shandong

Dongping lake, Taian

2

Jiangxi

East lake, Jiujiang

3

Henan

Minquan Ancient Yellow-river National Wetland Park

4

Shandong

South Four Lake Provincial Nature Reserve, Jining

5

Hebei

Baiyangdian wetland, Xiongan New District

6

Hubei

Fuhe wetland, Wuhan

7

Anhui

Jiaogang Wetland Park, Huainan

8

Hubei

Baoxiehu park, Wuhan

9

Hubei

Honghu Wetland National Nature Reserve

10

Hubei

Fanwan Lake National Wetland Park

11

Hebei

Hengshui Lake National Nature Reserve

12

Jiangsu

Feng County Ancient Yellow-river National Wetland Park

13

Anhui

Huangpi Lake, Hefei

14

Hubei

Jijia Lake Wetland Park, Dangyang

15

Shandong

Coal mining subsidence wetland, Jining

16

Hubei

Liangzi Lake Provincial Nature Reserve

Source: Baer’s Pochard Task Force, EAAFP

The results of this survey are a key milestone in the protection of Baer’s Pochard in China and build on the work over the last ten years.  It was in 2016 that NFGA invited Beijing Forestry University to establish the “China Baer’s Pochard Protection and Monitoring Working Group”, with the responsibility for organising and coordinating the protection and monitoring the species in China. In recent years, the group has been engaged in ecological research on the Baer’s Pochard, established a national conservation and monitoring network, hosted international conferences, compiled the “National Baer’s Pochard Conservation Action Plan”, and collaborated with Beijing Zoo to establish China’s first ex-situ breeding population. Based on the research results, habitat restoration has been carried out in several important distribution areas in China, including at Hengshui Hu in Hebei Province.

It was back in 2018 that I participated in an international meeting on Baer’s Pochard at Hengshui Lake in Hebei Province, working alongside the late Rich Hearn of the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust and Coordinator of the Baer’s Pochard Task Force.  I can’t help thinking Rich would have been over the moon to see the progress on protecting Baer’s Pochard in China since that meeting, and I can think of no better tribute to Rich’s lifelong dedication to waterbirds than seeing Baer’s Pochard come back from the brink.  Of course, the future of this species is far from certain but these survey results are hugely encouraging and demonstrate that, with coordination, the involvement of key stakeholders sprinkled with energy and passion, conservation works! 

Thank you to Professor Ding Changqing of Beijing Forestry University for providing a summary of the recent survey and for his incredible efforts as Chair of the Baer’s Pochard Task Force to turn around the fortunes of Baer’s Pochard in China.  And thank you to the hundreds of volunteers who dedicated time to look for and meticulously count these special waterbirds at wetland sites throughout China last winter.

 

Title image: a female Baer’s Pochard (Aythya baeri 青头潜鸭 Qīng tóu qián yā) at XiHai in Beijing in January 2025 (Terry Townshend)

New Zealand Ambassador to China hosts “Friends of the Flyway”

It’s easy to get caught up in the doom and gloom that seems to be prevalent right now.  But every now and then, something happens that provides a shot in the arm.. an event or moment that inspires and provides hope.

16 September at the New Zealand Embassy in Beijing was one of those moments.  Clare Fearnley, the brilliant New Zealand Ambassador to China, hosted the inaugural ‘Friends of the Flyway’ to celebrate the migratory birds of the East Asian-Australasian Flyway, bringing together ambassadors and senior diplomats from the 22 countries that make up the East Asian-Australasian Flyway Partnership, the secretariat of the EAAFP, senior Chinese government officials, including the Deputy Administrator of the National Forestry and Grassland Administration, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Deputy Mayor of Dandong (stewards of Yalu Jiang, dubbed a “five-star” service station on the shorebird expressway), academics and ‘friends’.  

Not only did the event provide an opportunity to celebrate and raise awareness of the flyway among ambassadors and senior diplomats, elevating migratory birds as a foreign policy issue, but it also stimulated ideas and discussions, resulting in a few potential new initiatives, such as managing embassy grounds as ‘wildlife areas’ with embassies signing up to commitments to monitor birds and other wildlife, and to make changes to management practices to improve the habitat for resident and migratory birds.  A birding trip to the coast next May, for Ambassadors to experience the spring migration, is on the cards, and ‘bird-friendly’ glass, painted with ultraviolet patterns, was showcased by local artists as part of the solution to bird collisions (thought to cause the deaths of up to a billion birds in North America annually, with a new research project now starting in China to assess the scale of the issue here).

In her opening, Clare told the story of the ‘Kuaka’, the Māori name for the Bar-tailed Godwit, that has such a special place in their culture. The Kuaka is considered to be the link between the northern and southern hemispheres, a carrier of knowledge and the bringer of positive messages.  For Māoris they were birds of mystery, (‘Kua kite te kohanga kuaka?  Who has seen the nest of the kuaka?’).

Clare Fearnley, New Zealand Ambassador to China, delivering her welcome remarks to the “Friends of the Flyway” on 16 September.

Nearly all New Zealand Bar-tailed Godwits are from the baueri subspecies and breed in western Alaska. Their incredible migration forms a triangle.  Following the breeding season, these birds make an almost incomprehensible non-stop eight or nine day flight of more than 11,000km to New Zealand, only recently discovered through the tracking of “E7” in 2007. After spending the non-breeding season in New Zealand, they begin their northern migration from early March, heading for refuelling sites around the Yellow Sea, many to the Yalu Jiang in Dandong, where they fatten up at this five-star service station for the last leg of the journey to Alaska.

Professor Lei Guangchun of Beijing Forestry University tells the story of “E7”, the Bar-tailed Godwit that flew non-stop from Alaska to New Zealand revealing the incredible migration of this species for the first time.

Migratory birds do not respect international borders and, over a calendar year, many will visit multiple countries as they move from breeding grounds to non-breeding grounds via stopover sites.  It follows, therefore, that no single country can secure the future of these birds on its own.  With shared natural heritage comes a shared responsibility and, as we are in the midst of one of the greatest extinction events on Earth, and the first to be driven by humans, it is vital that the international response must go beyond national actions to protect key habitats and species, important though these actions are, to involve sustained and coordinated international cooperation.

Tan Guangming, Deputy Director of the National Forestry and Grassland Administration, delivering his remarks at the “Friends of the Flyway” event on 16 September.

The East Asian-Australasian Flyway is a bird ‘superhighway’ for more than 50 million waterbirds, including 35 globally threatened species, many of which commute between breeding grounds in the far north, some inside the Arctic Circle, and non-breeding grounds in the southern hemisphere.  Many travel as far as Australia and New Zealand.  However, it is not only the ‘ends of the flyway’ – the breeding grounds in Artic Russia and the non-breeding grounds in Australia and New Zealand that are important.  The commute relies on stopover sites, particularly those in the Yellow Sea.

That is why this initiative – bringing together ambassadors from flyway countries with senior Chinese government officials – was so important.  It is now hoped (expected?) that ambassadors from other Flyway countries will host similar events, celebrating particular aspects of the Flyway or specific species and sites, whilst helping to nurture and strengthen international cooperation along this important route for migratory birds.   

Huge kudos to Clare and her team, especially Svar Barrington and Hayley Anderson, for initiating this event and for the New Zealand embassy’s ongoing leadership in putting biodiversity high up on the agenda for foreign policy and diplomacy.

 

 

Header photo: Clare Fearnley, New Zealand Ambassador to China, welcoming Tan Guangming, Deputy Director of the National Forestry and Grassland Administration.