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Three-month Fishing Ban on Lower Reaches of Yangtze Since April
Nanjing, on the southern bank of Yangtze River, will become the first area to observe a three-month fishing ban on the river from April 1.

The ban, which will become a regular annual activity, is designed to protect wildlife and resources on China's longest and the world's third longest river.

With a length of 6,300 km, the Yangtze runs through Qinghai, Sichuan, Yunnan, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, Anhui and Jiangsu provinces before emptying into the East China Sea at Shanghai.

In Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu Province, some 100 km of Yangtze River waters will be forbidden for fishing. Local sources said the city has allocated 360,000 yuan (about US$43,373) to subsidize affected local fishermen.

Information from the Chinese Ministry of Agriculture said the fishing ban on the Yangtze River, the first such operation on the mighty river, will extend to 4,251 km long the river at different times.

The fishing ban on the upper reaches of Yangtze from southwest China's Yunnan Province to central China's Hubei Province is being carried out from February to April, while the ban on the lower reaches of the river from Hubei to east China's Shanghai, including that in Nanjing, will begin from April to June.

The river's annual catch of wild fish has fallen to about 100, 000 tons a year, about one fourth of what Yangtze fishermen routinely caught in 1954. Its fishing output accounts for 60 percent of the country's total freshwater fishing output, according to the ministry.

Since 1995 there has been an annual three-month fishing ban in the Yellow Sea, as well as the East and South China Seas.

( March 27, 2002)

Spring Fishing Ban on China's Largest Freshwater Lake
Chinese Mainland Stops Labor Exports to Taiwan's Fishing Boats
Nation to Cut Fishing Force
Fishermen Develop Mutual Insurance Network
Fishing Ban Imposed on the Yangtze
Fishing Statistics "Basically Correct," Ministry Says
Fishing and Shipping Banned on East China Lake
Seaside Fishing Banks Planned in South China
Chinese Crew Reclaims Fishing Boat From Somali Pirates
Sino-South Korea Fishing Agreement to Take Effect
Oceangoing Fishing Boats Set Off for South Pacific Ocean
Fishery to Score 170 Billion Yuan in Output Value in 2000
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