Chicago Sun-Times

IT’S A GOOD TIME FOR A SNAPPER CHAT

More studies on common snapping turtles are needed

- DALE BOWMAN Follow me on Twitter @ BowmanOuts­ide.

While fishing classic spots in the south suburbs, Michael O’Brien has been doing well on panfish and encounteri­ng some “really good- looking snappers.’’

“Some are older ‘ mossbacks,’ ’’ he emailed. “I remember the older guys, nearly 50 years ago, snagging ’ em at Sherman Park and selling ’ em to local taverns for soup, etc.

“Talking with my brother made me wonder, though, if they’re OK to eat. Are there too many accumulate­d toxins within to be concerned about? I’m talking 20- to 40- pound big ’ uns. I’d love to get one outta there and fix it up because I remember how tasty they were smoked, etc.’’

Interestin­g question, which led to interestin­g tangential points when I contacted Chris

Phillips, curator of amphibians and reptiles for the Illinois Natural History Survey, about common snapping turtles.

O’Brien’s concern about toxins is legitimate. I was also concerned about harvest of old snappers.

“Toxins do build up in older aquatic organisms, especially in the fat stores, so there is a health risk,’’ Phillips emailed. “That risk varies by location, and only thorough water testing and turtle- tissue testing can determine the risk.

“Then there’s the risk to the snapping- turtle population incurred by harvesting mature animals, especially females. This is because most turtle species have delayed maturation, where sexual maturity takes much longer than most other reptiles, up to 20 years for a female snapping turtle to lay her first clutch of eggs. Taking even one mature female from a population could have serious consequenc­es.’’

Illinois has a season for common snapping turtles from June 15 to Oct. 15 with a daily bag of two.

Theymay be taken “only by hand, hook and line, or bow and arrow except in the following Illinois counties where bowfishing for common snapping turtles is not permitted: Randolph, Perry, Franklin, Hamilton, White, Gallatin, Saline, Williamson, Jackson, Union, Johnson, Pope, Hardin, Massac, Pulaski and Alexander.’’

The prohibitio­n on bowfishing in those southern counties is to prevent accidental harvest of the protected alligator snapping turtle.

The obvious question, at least to me, was whether we need stiffer regulation­s on common snappers.

“I suspect we need to tighten the regs, but first we need to know about our current harvest levels,’’ Phillips said. “We need the same data as we collect for game fish in Illinois, but currently there are no reporting requiremen­ts. We also don’t have a funded program to track trends in snappingtu­rtle population­s as we do for some game fish. It may be that snapping- turtle harvest is so low in Illinois, that the current regs are fine. It would be nice to know.”

Yes, it would be nice. Money to study that would be nice, too.

Wild things

I noticed cicadas singing heartily in the trees on the fullmoon weekend. The cadences of summer build.

Stray cast

Of the many things wrong at Wrigley Field this year, James Taylor getting top billing over Bonnie Raitt bugs me the most. It’s like choosing old salt cod over fresh- caught redfish.

 ?? | DALE BOWMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? While legal to catch a snapping turtle, it might be time to consider more study of Illinois’ snapping- turtle harvest and population­s.
| DALE BOWMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES While legal to catch a snapping turtle, it might be time to consider more study of Illinois’ snapping- turtle harvest and population­s.
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