On April 21, the reporter learned from the Erguna National Wetland Park in Hulunbuir City, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, that with the arrival of the migratory bird migration season, the artificially-bred swan geese raised there migrate with the migratory geese.

  This batch of artificially bred swan geese was entrusted by the Wildlife Protection Station of the Forestry and Grass Bureau of Hulunbuir to raise about 150 in the Ergun National Wetland Park.

Since April this year, the staff have carried out rewilding training on these swan geese, but when they are hungry or attacked by other animals, they will fly back to the duty room to look for "rescue."

  In the near future, with the arrival of the peak of the swan migration, the flying geese from time to time in the sky and the artificially-bred swan geese hovering in the low air are mixed with each other. They will fly to Siberia together, where they will thrive.

  As of April 20, only 70 or 80 of these artificially bred swan geese remained.

The staff will continue to take care of them and wait for the arrival of the next group of migratory birds and take them to the sky together.

  The swan goose was included in the "World Conservation Union's Red List of Endangered Species" in 2016, and it is also China's second-level national key protected wild animal.

  (Zhang Wei and Qin Xuwei highlight the production of Ma Zhiyuan, the source of the video, Ergun Media Center)

Editor in charge: [Wang Kai]