JUNE 26,
2019
By
analyzing records in countries of the Amazon and Orinoco basins—which include
Brazil, Venezuela, Colombia, Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador—a paper published today
in Oryx—The International Journal of Conservation, categorized 85 past and
present initiatives or projects that work to preserve the South American River
Turtle, or charapa (Podocnemis expansa), a critically endangered species. These
projects are protecting more than 147,000 female turtles across the basin, an
unprecedented figure.
The paper
"On the future of the giant South American river turtle, Podocnemis
expansa" was drafted by 29 Latin American researchers and scientists,
including WCS's German Forero Medina, Camila R. Ferrara, and Camila K.
Fagundes, Ruben Cueva, and Brian D. Horne. The collaboration stems from a 2014
workshop held in Balbina, Brazil in which park rangers, indigenous people, and
conservationists from the six countries provided information on their work to
protect the charapa. The efforts discussed in that continental meeting and
subsequent study reveal the serious commitment of public and private entities to
conserve the species.
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