Pakistan unveils new 5-year plan to save the endangered Indus River Dolphin

Strategy includes habitat restoration and safer river flows to protect the country’s iconic freshwater species

PHOTO: WWF-Pakistan

Pakistan, working with WWF-Pakistan and federal and provincial departments, is developing a five-year national strategy to conserve the endangered Indus river dolphin, officials said. The plan, still under consultation, aims to protect the species and restore its riverine habitat through coordinated action across provinces.

“The first Indus Dolphin Conservation Action Plan was drawn up in 2011,” said Hammad Naqi, director general of WWF-Pakistan. “Shifts in river ecology and new threats mean the plan needs a comprehensive review and updating.”

WWF-Pakistan and the federal and provincial wildlife, fisheries, environment, and irrigation departments including Punjab, Sindh, and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa agencies have held consultations to build consensus on the plan’s key elements, officials said.

Naqi said dolphin numbers remain lower in Punjab than in Sindh and that unsustainable fishing practices including illegal or harmful nets are the greatest immediate threat in the Punjab stretch. Experts also warned that reduced river flows, pollution, and riverbank degradation compound the risk.

Population estimates have improved in recent decades though figures vary by source. A large survey in 2017 recorded about 1,816 dolphins between Chashma and Sukkur while WWF-Pakistan officials say current estimates are close to 2,000.

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Participants also highlighted the urgency of restoring river ecosystems and associated wetlands, securing high-risk zones, and improving water-flow management through measures that can be enforced immediately on the ground. According to specialists, robust coordination between federal and provincial institutions will be central to the success of the new plan.

Proposed elements of the action plan include increasing dolphin numbers through focused protection, rehabilitating riverine and wetland habitats, nominating critical sites for international recognition such as Ramsar or UNESCO Man and Biosphere status, strengthening law enforcement, expanding rescue and monitoring units, and a major push on community participation and youth awareness.

The 2011 plan updated earlier conservation measures. The critical stretch between Guddu and Sukkur, long recognised as core dolphin habitat, has been protected under earlier arrangements. Previous plans recommended a joint coordination committee and rescue units for dolphins that stray into irrigation canals. The 2011 plan also emphasised minimum environmental flows, reducing harmful nets, and training fishing communities.

Sheikh Muhammad Zahid, additional chief wildlife ranger for south Punjab, said the Indus dolphin is protected under wildlife law and that strict measures are enforced where populations persist. He noted sizeable populations between Chashma and Sukkur barrages and said monitoring and scientific assessments are being strengthened. Officials and specialists said the new strategy will set a clear direction for the species’ long-term survival and mark a step toward safeguarding Pakistan’s freshwater ecosystems.

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