The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US trafficker­s cater to Asia’s taste for turtles

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STONE HARBOR, N.J.: A trial begins next week for a man charged with traffickin­g thousands of protected turtles captured in New Jersey, an unlikely hotbed of wildlife poaching that has helped supply China with a culinary delicacy that is hard to find in Asia.

David Sommers, 64, of Levittown, Pennsylvan­ia is accused of plucking some 3,500 diamondbac­k terrapins and their eggs from the coastal marshes of southern New Jersey and selling them in violation of the Lacey Act, a federal statute that prohibits the traffickin­g of wildlife captured or killed in jurisdicti­ons where it is illegal.

Asia, where native population­s of turtles have been depleted, is fueling a surge in turtle poaching across the United States, wildlife advocates say.

“Rare species are being stolen from our own backyard for the illegal trade,” said Rachel Kramer, manager at the Washington-based World Wildlife Foundation and Traffic, a non-profit that monitors global wildlife trade.

Capturing or killing many of the species in highest demand is illegal in states where they range.

Many Asian consumers love the taste of their meat or covet turtles with dramatic-looking shells as pets. The turtles’ flashy shells actually evolved as protection from predators in nature.

Poaching devastates wild turtle population­s because the reptiles are slow to mature to reproducti­ve age, said biologist Brian Williamson of The Wetlands Institute in Stone Harbor, New Jersey.

Most diamondbac­k terrapins, a particular­ly prized species, must survive to age 8 before they can lay eggs, which means evading predators including raccoons, skunks, seagulls and humans.

“All kinds of animals – including humans – love to eat them. They’re the potato chip of the salt marsh,” Williamson said.

The New Jersey case is not an isolated incident.

Two China Eastern Airlines flight attendants were fined in July in federal court in California for attempting to smuggle dozens of spotted turtles in their luggage from Los Angeles to China.

Five men were indicted in March for traffickin­g diamondbac­k terrapins and spotted turtles captured in North Carolina waters and hidden in packages of noodles and candy being shipped to Hong Kong.

Among the US species in high demand are the spotted turtle, a tiny animal with yellow dots on its shell that sells on the black market in Asia for up to US$2,000 each, said Ed Grace, head of law enforcemen­t for the US Fish and Wildlife Service.

Smugglers also get top dollar for the alligator snapping turtle, an imposing species from the US Southeast with spikes on its shell that resemble a dragon, said Collette Adkins, an attorney with the non-profit Center for Biological Diversity.

Diamondbac­k terrapins, such as those Sommers is accused of traffickin­g, are prized as pets for their unique markings, which are different for each turtle.

Their capture is illegal in New Jersey, where their habitat is dwindling.

Selling for up to US$3,000 each, the creatures are considered particular­ly healthful to eat because turtles symbolize longevity in some Asian cultures, said Williamson.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Diamondbac­k terrapins are pictured in a tank at the Wetlands Institute in Stone Harbor, New Jersey, US.
— Reuters photo Diamondbac­k terrapins are pictured in a tank at the Wetlands Institute in Stone Harbor, New Jersey, US.

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