
Mai Po Logo: Pied Kingfisher |
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6 March 1995 as a very special date for Mai Po and the Inner Deep Bay
area. After years of lobbying by WWF Hong Kong and conservations both
locally and overseas, and even the government-appointed Town Planning
Board, the Hong Kong Government decided to designate an area of about
1,500 hectares in Mai Po and Inner Deep Bay as a 'Wetland of International
Importance' under the Ramsar Convention. Along with the announcement
of the designation, there was also a proposal to spend a sum of about
$423 million over five years for necessary land clearance, establishment
of education/visitor centers and conservation management.
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| Boardwalk for visitors at
the Kushiro Marsh Ramsar Site, Japan. |
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River transport in the Sunderbans
Site, Bay of Bengal |
An appropriate analogy to this Ramsar Site designation is the recognition
of a scholar awarded a Nobel prize. Aiming at conserving and promoting
the wise use of wetlands, the Ramsar Convention is an international treaty
adopted at Ramsar, Iran in 1971. Following ratification by the U.K. in
1976, the Convention was extended to Hong Kong in 1979. China became
a signatory in 1992.
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| A view of the freshwater
marsh at Kushiro. |
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A view of the wetland in
the Sunderbans. |
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The extensive mangroves
at the Dongzaigang Ramsar Site, Hainan Island |
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