Press Release, October 18, 2018, Little Rock, Ark— Responding to a petition
from the Center for Biological Diversity and several Arkansas-based
environmental organizations, the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission today
proposed regulations to restrict commercial trapping of wild freshwater
turtles and study the effect of commercial trapping on wild
populations.
The
new regulations would ban commercial harvest in the Gulf Coastal Plain
and the St. Francis River in Greene and Clay counties. The rules would
also ban the harvest of the razorback musk turtle across the state and
clarify permitting and reporting requirements.
The
commission will conduct a three-year study from 2019 to 2021 to
determine the effect of commercial trapping on wild turtle populations
in the Delta region, where the majority of trapping occurs. During the
study period, the sale of commercial turtle harvest and dealer permits
will be capped at 150 permits per year.
“This
is a much-needed step toward protecting Arkansas’s turtles and
understanding the grim toll of commercial trapping, but stronger
safeguards are critical,” said Elise Bennett, a Center attorney
dedicated to protecting rare reptiles and amphibians. “Tens of thousands
of turtles are taken from the wild each year. Arkansas needs to fully
ban this unsustainable practice once and for all.”
Right
now trappers can legally collect unlimited numbers of 14 types of
turtles from roughly half the state to sell domestically or export to
foreign food, pet and medicinal markets. The new regulations would still
allow commercial collection of 13 types of turtles, but with additional
geographic limitations.
Scientists
have repeatedly documented that freshwater turtles cannot sustain any
significant level of wild collection without population-level impacts
and declines. One study of common snapping turtles demonstrated that a
modest harvest of 10 percent per year for 15 years could result in a 50
percent reduction in population size. And an Arkansas study found that
turtles from populations in heavily harvested areas were significantly
smaller than those from areas where harvesting is not permitted.
Conservative
records show that more than 1.3 million wild turtles were harvested
from Arkansas’s waters over the past 13 years. Most of these were large,
sexually mature turtles important to the survival of wild populations.
“We’re
confident the commission will reach the same conclusion through its
proposed study that others across the country have already reached, that
commercial trapping of wild turtles is simply not sustainable,” said
Bennett. “We’ll continue to urge the commission toward a full ban.”
A growing number of states have already dedicated themselves to protecting wild turtles. In February Missouri banned commercial turtle trapping, and in August Texas followed suit. In 2017 New York ended commercial trapping of diamondback turtles, Nevada halted commercial reptile collection, and Iowa reined
in trapping with new harvest limits. In the past decade, Florida and
Alabama completely banned commercial turtle trapping, and Georgia and
Mississippi approved stronger regulations on the industry.
The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is now accepting public comments on the proposed commercial trapping regulations.
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