Turtle protectors work together to end poaching
The illegal collection and trade of wildlife, which can involve sophisticated international operations, is threatening Connecticut’s native turtle species, according to state officials.
Driven both by demand for North American turtles in east Asia and by trade in the United States, poaching of wild turtles can devastate local populations, experts said. Efforts are ongoing to protect the reptiles, including through law enforcement, preserving habitat, and education.
“The risk of illegal collection for profit or trade in Connecticut is definitely something that we’re concerned about,” said Mike Ravesi, a wildlife biologist for the state Department of Energy & Environmental Protection.
Officials confirmed there have been significant turtle confiscations in the state in recent years. But the DEEP cannot disclose details due to pending investigations, said Jenny Dickson, who heads the agency’s Wildlife Division.
In some documented cases in other states, poachers have worked for “well-organized international criminal syndicates,” said Scott Buchanan, co-chairman of the Collaborative to Combat the Illegal Trade in Turtles and who serves as Rhode Island’s state herpetologist.
Buchanan described the CCITT as a group of law enforcement officials, biologists, conservationists and others from across the country who came together after recognizing the need for a coordinated response to turtle trafficking, which can cross state and national borders.
“There’s a lot of demand from overseas, particularly China … but there’s also a lot of demand in the United States and western Europe,” Buchanan said. “The way (the smuggling) works is that some guy, some local guy, starts collecting turtles based on some local knowledge, and then he gets involved in the internet somehow and then one way or another he’s finding a middleman that’s shipping it overseas,” Buchanan said.
High-profile cases demonstrate
how a single operation can involve hundreds or even thousands of trafficked turtles.
In one federal case, a man, Kang Juntao, was accused of operating a multistate turtle smuggling ring that allegedly used poachers and middlemen to export at least 1,500 turtles, according to federal authorities.
The alleged trade affected several species native to Connecticut, according to federal authorities in a release and an affidavit filed in federal court in New Jersey, where an undercover agent investigated the operation. Court documents do not suggest, however, that the case directly involved Connecticut.
Juntao’s case remains pending; he is charged with money laundering in the case, according to federal authorities. Requests for comment were left Friday with Linda Foster, the public defender representing Juntao.
Connecticut’s turtles
In Connecticut, it is illegal to keep native turtle species as pets, according to Dickson, the head of the DEEP’s Wildlife Division. It also is illegal to remove turtles from the wild or liberate wild turtles being held in captivity, she said, noting there is an exception during snapping turtle season, when individuals may collect up to 10 adult snappers for their personal
food supply.
Connecticut is home to eight native land, freshwater and coastal turtle species, including the bog turtle, which is considered endangered by the state.
Another native species is the Eastern box turtle, which Dickson called “one of the most rapidly declining (turtle) species in the region.” It is designated a species of special concern, according to the DEEP.
Ravesi said box turtles appear on black markets, as do wood turtles and spotted turtles – two other Connecticut species of special concern,
For turtles that end up abroad, “there’s a variety of reasons why they get sent to Asia,” Ravesi said.
“There is a pet trade, where they get kept as pets. They’re used for food and then perceived medical benefits and … their parts are often made into jewelry and other decorative items,” he said. Since hatchlings can face mortality rates as high as 90 percent and since many turtles take a decade or more to reach reproductive age, Ravesi said, the removal of a single adult turtle can significantly affect an imperiled population.
Anthony Pierlioni, a Wallingford resident who heads a nonprofit called the TurtleRoom that works to educate people on the plight of turtles, said he regularly receives
Facebook messages from strangers asking whether he has turtles to sell. He attributes the phenomenon to the fact that he posts information about the shelled critters.
The internet helps fuel the turtle trade, conservationists said.
Dave Collins, who directs the Turtle Survival Alliance’s North American conservation program, warns against sharing photos of wild turtles on social media. Even when users do not indicate where they saw the turtle, the photograph’s location may be embedded in the photo, he said.
“Illegal traders really kind of focus on the internet to find locations” to collect turtles, Collins said. “(Hobbyist web pages) are the kind of sites that people who are involved in the illegal trade do frequent.”
How big is the threat?
Overall, habitat loss represents the biggest threat to turtles, according to Buchanan, the CCITT cochairman. “Then you add the illegal trade to that and you’re talking about specific populations being hit really hard all at once … and you just have a recipe for disaster,” he said.
He said targeted poaching, in which individuals may collect dozens of species from one area, can result in “unsustainable” population losses.
“We’re not talking about the extinction of the entire species of, say, Eastern box turtles, but what we can expect is that they might be wiped out of an entire state, like Rhode Island for example, if illegal collection should take hold and continue unabated,” Buchanan said.
In other states, “illegal collection has been documented to be responsible for wiping out … localized populations,” he said.
Connecticut has not made headlines for a case involving large-scale collection of turtles.
But in one New York case where officials reportedly seized hundreds of turtles , the DEEP received strong indications some of the turtles allegedly were taken from Connecticut, according to Dickson.
“They had a number of turtles that they were quite certain had been collected from many of the states in the Northeast” including Connecticut, Dickson said. “That is often one of the challenges, because (turtles) can sometimes be moved around pretty easily without people necessarily noticing until there’s some big event like that.”
“There is a real risk of and concern for similar cases occurring in Connecticut,” Ravesi, the DEEP biologist, told Hearst Connecticut Media in an email.
In an interview, Ravesi encouraged residents who see suspicious behavior, either online or in person, to report it to the DEEP by calling 860-424-3333 or emailing deep.dispatch@ct.gov.
He also warned against releasing captive-held turtles into the wild, where they could spread disease.
“If people are ever in doubt as to what to do feel free to contact us,” he said.
Those interested in keeping turtles as pets might want to think twice.
“Consider choosing a different type of animal to keep as a pet, as there is no way to be 100% certain a dealer is operating ethically,” the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service told Hearst Connecticut Media in a statement provided by spokesperson Bridget Macdonald. “Pet turtles require specialized care for decades, so be sure you are ready for the commitment. If you are, don’t shop, adopt. Check local shelters and local turtle and tortoise societies for unwanted turtles.”
Long journey home
About two years ago, authorities confiscated around 35 snapping turtles from a Connecticut residence, said Dickson.
Since the turtles’ origins were unknown, the agency had to rehome them, Dickson said. Mystic Aquarium agreed to take them temporarily, she said, but some still have not found permanent homes.
And returning turtles to the wild is not as simple as dropping them off at the nearest pond. To prevent genetic harm to local populations, conservationists say they need to go back to their original habitats.