Press Release, May 23,
2018,
Contact(s): Laury Parramore,
703-358-2541 laury_parrramore@fws.gov
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service today celebrates World Turtle Day by addressing the growing threat of
unsustainable and illegal trade in native freshwater turtles through a final
rule that will bring four native freshwater turtle species under the protection
of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna
and Flora (CITES). The listing of the common snapping, Florida softshell,
smooth softshell and spiny softshell turtles under CITES will require exporters
to obtain a permit before shipping turtles overseas, helping the United States
better control trade to ensure it is legal.
“World Turtle Day gives us the
opportunity to celebrate and protect turtles and tortoises and their
disappearing habitats around the world and to focus on stopping illegal trade
in these species, which are threatened by unsustainable trade and wildlife
trafficking. In 2013, we collaborated with international partners to adopt
CITES protections for Asian freshwater turtles. Our own native species face the
same global demand, so it is critical we protect them under CITES as well,”
said Bryan Arroyo, the Service’s Assistant Director of International Affairs.
“We will work closely with state wildlife agencies to protect native species
and ensure trade is legal and sustainable, particularly for species at greatest
risk of over-exploitation.”
Freshwater turtles and tortoises
are collected, traded and utilized in overwhelming numbers. The Service
supports a strategic, global approach to freshwater turtle conservation, as
evidence shows that when protections for freshwater turtles are strengthened in
one region, demand in other regions for unprotected species may increase.
“U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
law enforcement investigations have documented illegally exported softshell
turtles to markets in Asia,” said Ed Grace, the Service’s Deputy Chief of Law
Enforcement. “Listing these species under CITES will help engage our
international partners to assist our special agents and wildlife inspectors in
the fight against the illegal turtle trade, including investigating the
criminals who profit from it.”
Trade in turtles is most common
in East Asia, principally in China, with supplier countries feeding
well-established legal and illegal trade networks. Turtles are used primarily
as food and in traditional medicines, although a growing pet trade across the
region and in other parts of the world is increasingly impacting a number of
threatened species.
CITES is an international
agreement signed by more than 180 governments that aims to ensure that
international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten
their survival. Species are listed under one of three appendices depending on
the severity of the threat presented by trade. Listed species may be traded
internationally only when accompanied by permits.
The Appendix-III listings of the
common snapping turtle and three North American softshell turtles follow the
successful sixteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties (CoP16) to CITES,
where the United States collaborated with China and Viet Nam to increase
protections for a number of Asian freshwater turtles. In total, three native
turtle species and 44 species of Asian freshwater turtles received increased
CITES protection at CoP16. Increased protections for freshwater turtles will
continue to be a priority for the Service at the upcoming CoP17, which will
take place in Johannesburg, South Africa, in September 2016.
For more information on CITES and
how it operates, including Appendix-III listings, visit: www.fws.gov/international/cites/how-cites-works.html.
The final rule will publish in the
Federal Register May 24, 2016. The listing will be effective Nov. 21, 2016.
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