{"id":2385,"date":"2010-08-14T12:58:18","date_gmt":"2010-08-14T12:58:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/seangallagher.wpengine.com\/blog\/?p=2385"},"modified":"2010-08-14T12:58:18","modified_gmt":"2010-08-14T12:58:18","slug":"the-chinese-alligator-a-species-on-the-brink-ii-pulitzer-center-4","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/gallagher-photo.com\/the-chinese-alligator-a-species-on-the-brink-ii-pulitzer-center-4\/","title":{"rendered":"The Chinese Alligator, A Species On The Brink \u2013 II \u2013 Pulitzer Center #4"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Chinese Alligators in enclosure at ARCAR<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

SEAN GALLAGHER, FOR THE <\/strong>PULITZER CENTER<\/strong><\/a>, ANHUI PROVINCE, CHINA<\/strong><\/p>\n

When I discovered in my research that China had its own crocodilian, I was excited to try to find an opportunity to photograph it. What I was not prepared for was to learn that the species is perilously near extinction.<\/p>\n

“In the past few centuries, the number of Yangtze alligator[s] has dropped dramatically”, explained Xie Yan, a quiet and unassuming\u00a0 woman who is the current director of the Wildlife Conservation Society’s China office. Having studied Zoology in university in Sichuan, she became concerned with the plight of many of China’s animals species, leading her to write numerous books about China’s wildlife. “According to a survey in 1998, only 120 wild Yangtze crocodiles [are] left. In the past, the number should be between 10,000 and one million,” continued Xie Yun, during an interview at the Anhui Research Center of Alligator Reproduction (ARCAR).<\/p>\n

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