Miami Herald

Despite being disguised, shells of endangered sea turtles are seized

- BY ADRIANA BRASILEIRO abrasileir­o@miamiheral­d.com

The sight of over 1,400 pieces of sea turtle shells, most about the size of dinner plates, on the floor of a warehouse near Miami Internatio­nal Airport was a sobering reminder that South Florida is a major hub for the illegal wildlife trade.

US Customs and Border Protection seized the shipment of endangered Hawksbill and Green sea turtle shells at an air cargo warehouse in late November last year — one of the largest seizures of turtle shells ever in the U.S..

Five large boxes full of scutes — the sections of a sea turtle shell — had arrived at Miami Internatio­nal Airport that day on a flight coming from the Caribbean, and were scheduled to be loaded on another flight to Asia a day later, CBP said in a statement.

The shell pieces from about 100 turtles were covered with a chalk-like blue paint, and registered in a customs manifest as “plastic recycle” in an attempt to disguise shells that are illegal to sell and export in the United States and most nations. But looking closely, the distinctiv­e brown, orange and light beige hues of hawksbill shells were visible underneath the powdery periwinkle coating.

“Wildlife traffickin­g is a serious crime that impacts species at home and abroad,” said Aurelia Skipwith, Director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “Sea turtles are critical members of healthy ocean ecosystems. Unfortunat­ely, they are also severely imdriving pacted by the illegal wildlife trade.”

CBP’s Contraband Enforcemen­t Team and Agricultur­e Specialist­s estimated that about 65 percent of the 290 pounds of scutes came from hawksbill turtles, while 35% came from Green turtles that were likely caught in the Caribbean or Central America. The shipment was among the largest ever seized in Miami.

Both species are protected by the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade of Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora, known as CITES. The internatio­nal agreement between government­s regulates trade in wildlife and plants and bans trade in sea turtle shells.

CBP and FWS didn’t arrest anyone in connection with the shipment because these agencies don’t have the authority to conduct investigat­ions in other countries without specific permission­s. But the federal agents were allowed to seize the shells because the shipment was in violation of CITES and in transit to other countries.

“Even though there were no prosecutio­ns related to this case, it was still an important action that helped combat wildlife crime,” said Eva Lara, regional supervisor wildlife inspector at FWS’s Office of Law Enforcemen­t. “Seizures can help deter wildlife traffickin­g by sending a clear message that wildlife crime isn’t welcome here in the U.S.”

Demand for hawksbill scutes, the flexible plates of a turtle shell used in tortoisesh­ell products like eyeglass frames, combs, brushes, jewelry, musical instrument picks and bow parts and furniture inlay, is the critically endangered species to extinction, scientists say. China and other Asian countries are particular­ly avid buyers, using the beautiful shells in personal and decorative items, and the turtle’s oil in traditiona­l medicine.

Global hawksbill population­s have declined by a staggering 85% over the past 100 years and estimates suggest there are as few as 15,000 to 20,000 nesting females worldwide, a fraction of their population just a few decades ago, according to the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature.

In addition to the illegal trade of their shell, the species faces the same threats as other sea turtles: degradatio­n of nesting habitats, poaching for their eggs and meat, entangleme­nt in fishing gear and marine pollution. Conservati­on efforts such

U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents display on Wednesday over 1,400 pieces of endangered sea turtle shells disguised as blue plastic.

as protecting nesting beaches haven’t been as effective for this species because these sea turtles make fewer nests in many different beaches in their range, said Sarah Milton, professor and interim chair of Florida Atlantic University’s Biological Sciences department.

“They nest a few at a time on many little beaches, so measures to protect large areas in nesting beaches don’t work as well for hawksbills as they do for loggerhead­s or leatherbac­ks, for example,” Milton said.

The hawksbill gets its name from the shape of its curved, pointed beak. The

species has been traded for centuries because of demand for tortoisesh­ell, which has been used since ancient times by many cultures. The ancient Greeks used shells to make lyres, while the Romans prized the hawksbill’s scutes for furniture, small decorative items and jewelry. In Louis XIV’s France the shells were widely used as thin inlays on ornate dressers, cabinets and even on entire walls at Versailles palace. Tortoisesh­ell is a key element of a furniture style that’s named after him.

Wide-scale trade started in the 17th century when tortoisesh­ell carving became popular in Japan and in Europe and trading boomed in colonial networks around the world. Until 1977, when CITES banned the internatio­nal trade of hawksbill turtles among its signatorie­s, there was no protection for these animals.

Because the species is found throughout the Caribbean Sea and western Atlantic Ocean including the Gulf of Mexico and South Florida, and from Central America to northern Brazil, Miami has become a gateway for the illegal export of these animals to Asia and Europe. The city is already a global hub in the import-export industry, and it’s the main port of entry for exotic reptiles and plants, dirty gold and smuggled songbirds, as well as shark fins.

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PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com

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