Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - Where is the address of the Huangpu River fish release

Where is the address of the Huangpu River fish release

Huangpu River source ecological fish release activities in Zhangcun Town Lang Village.

The ecological fish release activity is an important mark of the county's artificial breeding and release of this year's full start, *** released more than 20,000 silver carp, bighead carp and other types of fish fry.

As the source of the Huangpu River, Anji has been the implementation of artificial breeding and release as an important initiative to strengthen the waters of environmental protection and restoration, over the past few years has been a cumulative total of 4.1 million tails of various types of fish fry, effectively mitigating the depletion of resources in the natural waters of the source of the Huangpu River in Anji, to improve the structure of the waters of the ecological community.

Protecting the ecological safety of the source of the Huangpu River is the ****same voice of the people of Shanghai and Anji, and the two sides will take practical action to maintain and build up the Mother River, and protect the aquatic biological resources and the ecological environment of the waters.

Related Information

The Huangpu River is a landmark river in Shanghai, flowing through the downtown area of Shanghai and dividing the city into Puxi and Pudong. The Huangpu River is an important waterway in Shanghai, receiving the Wusong River (Suzhou Creek) at the Waibaidu Bridge in the center of Shanghai and then injecting into the Yangtze River at the Wusongkou, the last tributary of the Yangtze before it joins the East China Sea.

The Huangpu River is about 113 kilometers long and 300 to 770 meters wide. The Huangpu River begins at Dianshan Lake in Dianfeng, Zhujiajiao Town, Qingpu District, Shanghai, which receives much of the incoming water from the upstream Taihu Lake basin.

"Pu" means river in the ancient Wu language, and generally refers to an artificial river. The lower reaches of the Huangpu River were once called Huanghepu and Chunshenjiang, which is believed to be because Shanghai was once the fiefdom of Huanghe, the Chunshen ruler of Chu in the Warring States period.