Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Extinction threat as demand for turtle booms

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A TURTLE, famed for its polka dot skin, is under growing threat of extinction as demand for it as an exotic pet booms, a wildlife monitoring group warned yesterday.

Hundreds of the black spotted turtles ( Cuora amboinensi­s or South Asian Box Turtle), are regularly discovered at airports around Asia, having been illegally smuggled in luggage aboard commercial passenger flights, TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network, said.

Some are little bigger than a hand, but they can sell for thousands of dollars on the black market.

“Illegal internatio­nal trade of the black spotted turtle in Asia has escalated over recent years, and immediate action is required to stem the flow,” TRAFFIC said as it released a report on the reptile’s fate.

The turtle is found in the rivers of Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Pakistan. It is regarded as one of the most attractive turtles because of its spotted skin and boldly patterned shell.

The Internatio­nal Union of Conservati­on and Nature (IUCN) lists it as vulnerable, one step away from endangered, and TRAFFIC said the sudden rise in demand for the turtle as a pet in other parts of Asia had made its future much more fragile.

In the most recent seizure, 230 turtles were found in unclaimed bags at Bangkok’s main internatio­nal airport on May 14, according to TRAFFIC. The luggage had been on a flight from India.

Since January last year, authoritie­s around the region have seized more than 2 000 turtles, with most of the busts occurring in Bangkok, TRAFFIC said.

It said Bangkok was regarded as a transit hub, with the turtles then flown to Hong Kong, Taiwan and other places in East Asia where there was high demand for them as pets.

A mature turtle that is about 30cm long can cost more than $ 2 000 (R20 000) in Hong Kong.

It is mainly nocturnal and spends most of its day under leaf litter along streams. It feeds on aquatic plants, molluscs, crustacean­s, fallen fruits, fungi, worms and slugs.

Their courtship involves the male and female facing each other and, with outstretch­ed necks, they move their heads in the shape of an infinity symbol.

Many turtles around the world are seriously threatened, with those in Asia particular­ly at risk due to their habitats being destroyed or damaged, and demand for them as pets or food.

Seventeen of the 25 most critically endangered tortoises and freshwater turtles on the IUCN’s Red List are in Asia.

TRAFFIC said it sounded the alarm because of the alarming rise in turtle seizures in recent years, and to call for tougher action by authoritie­s.

It said that despite laws in place, people were rarely prosecuted when caught smuggling the turtles.

In rare cases of prosecutio­n, one Thai man was sentenced to three months in jail in Hong Kong, and another man was jailed for seven months in Taiwan.

TRAFFIC is an internatio­nal organisati­on dedicated to ensuring that trade in wild plants and animals is not a threat to the conservati­on of nature. – Sapa-AFP

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