Aerial view of the Yangtze River winding through green hills for an article about the Yangtze fishing ban

China’s Yangtze River fishing ban brings endangered species back from the edge

Five years ago, China made a bold bet on nature: ban all commercial fishing along the Yangtze River for a full decade and watch what happens. The results are striking. Environmental surveys conducted since the 2021 moratorium took effect confirm that fish populations are rising, critically endangered species are reproducing again, and the entire river system is showing measurable signs of recovery. The Yangtze fishing ban is emerging as one of the most significant freshwater conservation successes in modern history.

At a glance

  • Yangtze fishing ban: China launched a 10-year commercial moratorium in January 2021 C.E., covering roughly 332,000 miles of waterways across the basin.
  • Finless porpoise recovery: The Yangtze finless porpoise — once down to around 1,000 individuals — is now showing steady population growth, with frequent newborn calf sightings reported by researchers.
  • Fisher relocation: Approximately 300,000 commercial fishers were relocated and retrained as part of the sweeping policy, with government subsidies and vocational pathways supporting the transition.

Endangered species returning to a battered river

The Yangtze finless porpoise had become a symbol of everything going wrong with the river. Overfishing, industrial pollution, and heavy boat traffic had driven this critically endangered mammal toward extinction. Researchers now report consistent sightings across multiple stretches of the basin, including mother-calf pairs that signal active reproduction.

For biologists who spent years warning that the species might not survive, those sightings represent something extraordinary.

The Yangtze sturgeon is telling an equally remarkable story. Dam construction and decades of overharvesting had eliminated natural spawning for this ancient fish, which can live for decades and grow to enormous sizes. Today, natural reproduction has been confirmed in several river sections — something scientists considered nearly impossible just a few years ago. Peer-reviewed data published in leading freshwater ecology journals continues to document the scale of the rebound, giving researchers a growing body of evidence to draw on for future policy.

Dozens of native fish species that had not been recorded in years have reappeared across the basin. Researchers also note a significant increase in overall fish biomass throughout the system. The return of smaller species matters especially because they form the base of the food web that supports larger predators, amphibians, and migratory birds.

Former fishers become environmental guardians

Moving 300,000 commercial fishers away from their traditional livelihoods was never going to be simple. The Chinese government paired the ban with extensive support: vocational training programs, monthly financial subsidies, and pathways into alternative employment. The transition was difficult for many families whose identities and incomes had been tied to the river for generations.

What emerged from that transition is one of the most creative elements of the entire program.

Many former fishers now work as official river patrol officers and environmental monitors, using their deep, generational knowledge of the Yangtze to catch illegal poachers and report ecological changes. Their familiarity with hidden currents, seasonal fish movements, and remote riverbank locations makes them more effective than outside enforcement officials could be. This shift gives thousands of families stable, dignified work while directly protecting the ecosystem they know best.

The socioeconomic dimension matters because conservation policies that ignore human livelihoods tend to fail. The World Wildlife Fund has long called for basin-wide conservation strategies for the world’s most threatened freshwater systems, and the Yangtze project is now one of the clearest real-world demonstrations of what that commitment can achieve.

What the Yangtze teaches the world about freshwater recovery

The ten-year ban is only halfway through its timeline. Researchers caution that continuous monitoring and strict enforcement will be essential to make the early gains permanent — illegal fishing pressure has not disappeared entirely, and some species remain at critically low population levels. Still, the current trajectory gives scientists significant reason for optimism.

The United Nations Environment Programme has highlighted freshwater biodiversity loss as one of the most urgent and underreported environmental crises on the planet. The Yangtze’s recovery demonstrates that bold, sustained intervention can reverse that trajectory. Even a river subjected to decades of industrial abuse and intensive harvesting can begin to heal — if pressure is removed decisively and at scale.

The model is drawing serious attention from policymakers and conservation organizations worldwide. Ecologists studying large-scale ecosystem recovery point to the Yangtze as evidence that nature can repair itself when humans choose to step back — and that the communities closest to that nature can be its most powerful protectors.

The river that once seemed to be dying is now, visibly and measurably, coming back to life.

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For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Yangtze River

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