List of States Curbing Commercial
Turtle Harvest Grows
Texas Spiny Softshell, by Gary M.
Stolz, USFWS, Image available for media use.
Press Release 3/21/18- Austin,
Texas- In response to a petition<http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/campaigns/southern_and_midwestern_freshwater_turtles/pdfs/Petition_to_TPWD_to_End_Commercial_Collection_of_Turtles.pdf>
filed by the Center for Biological Diversity and several Texas-based
conservation organizations, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission today
approved publication of a proposed rule that would prohibit commercial
collection of the state's wild turtles.
"We're so grateful these
badly needed protections for Texas' rare, native turtles are moving
forward," said Jenny Loda, a Center attorney and biologist who works to
protect vulnerable reptiles and amphibians. "For-profit collectors
shouldn't be allowed to put the state's turtles at risk of extinction."
Texas is the latest in a growing
list of states - including Missouri, New York and Iowa - that have put an end
to unlimited commercial collection of freshwater turtles.
Under current Texas law,
unlimited collection of four native, freshwater turtle species is allowed on
private property: common snapping turtles, red-eared sliders, smooth softshells
and spiny softshells.
Texas modified its regulations in
2007 to protect freshwater turtles from collection on the state's public lands
and waters. But this only resulted in protections for turtles in 2.2 percent of
the water bodies in Texas. Recent studies concluded that current turtle
collection in Texas is likely not sustainable.
At today's Texas Parks and
Wildlife Commission meeting, staff from the state Parks and Wildlife Department
presented their findings based on a review of the petition, along with
scientific literature and the department's own data. Department staff
determined that there is sufficient scientific justification to prohibit the
commercial collection of the common snapping turtle, red-eared slider, smooth
softshell and spiny softshell.
Department officials further
explained that turtles are among the nongame species of greatest concern in
Texas. Turtles' slow reproduction makes it unlikely that populations can remain
stable when high numbers of adults and older juveniles are steadily removed
from a population.
"This is great news for
Texas' freshwater turtles as commercial trapping is devastating to turtle
populations that are already suffering from multiple other threats, including
habitat loss, water pollution and vehicular collisions," said Evelyn Merz,
conservation chair for the Sierra Club's Lone Star Chapter. "We hope that
the state will finalize the proposed rule and ban commercial turtle trapping;
otherwise, Texas' turtle populations will continue to plummet."
The petition that spurred today's
action was submitted last year by the Center for Biological Diversity, Sierra
Club's Lone Star Chapter, Texas Rivers Protection Association and Texas Snake
Initiative.
Background
Millions of turtles classified as
wild-caught are exported from the United States every year to supply food and
medicinal markets in Asia, where native turtle populations have already been
depleted by soaring consumption. Because turtles bioaccumulate toxins from prey
and burrow in contaminated sediment, turtle meat is often laced with mercury,
PCBs and pesticides, posing a health risk. Adult turtles are also taken from
the wild to breed hatchlings for the international pet trade.
As part of a campaign<http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/campaigns/southern_and_midwestern_freshwater_turtles/index.html> to
protect turtles in the United States, the Center for Biological Diversity has
been petitioning states that allow unrestricted commercial turtle collection to
improve their regulations. Earlier this month, in response to a Center
petition, the Missouri Department of Conservation banned commercial collection
of the state's wild freshwater turtles. In September of last year, Nevada
created a statewide ban on the destructive commercial collection of all
reptiles and New York halted all commercial terrapin turtle harvesting.
Before that, in March 2017, Iowa
adopted new regulations setting closed seasons and possession limits for
commercial turtle trappers. In 2012 Georgia approved state rules regulating the
commercial collection of turtles, and Alabama completely banned commercial
collection. And in 2009 Florida responded by banning almost all commercial
collection of freshwater turtles from public and private waters.
Texas is in a regional hotspot
for commercial turtle collectors, and reform is needed. If the state ends
commercial collection within its borders, adjacent states would likely follow
its example; the region would be better equipped to protect its turtle
populations by making clear to turtle traders that trade is strictly regulated
and enforced.
The Center recently petitioned
for a ban on unlimited commercial trapping in Arkansas<http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/news/press_releases/2017/freshwater-turtles-09-25-2017.php>,
Louisiana<http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/news/press_releases/2016/freshwater-turtles-10-19-2016.html>
and Oklahoma<http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/news/press_releases/2017/freshwater-turtles-05-11-2017.php>,
three states that share a border with Texas.
Contacts:
Jenny Loda, Center for Biological
Diversity, (510) 844-7136, jloda@biologicaldiversity.org<mailto:jloda@biologicaldiversity.org>
Evelyn
Merz, Sierra Club, (713) 644-8228, elmerz@hal-pc.org<mailto:elmerz@hal-pc.org
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