Press
Release 5/11/17- OKLAHOMA CITY— The Center for Biological Diversity and
several Oklahoma-based environmental organizations petitioned
the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation today to end
commercial collection of the state’s wild turtles, which are critical to
the health of freshwater ecosystems. Turtle trappers can now legally
collect unlimited numbers of eight turtle species from waterways on
private lands to sell domestically or export for Asian food and
medicinal markets.
“Turtle
trappers shouldn’t be allowed to pad their pocketbooks by putting the
state’s precious wildlife at risk,” said Collette Adkins, the Center
biologist and senior attorney who authored the petition. “For the sake
of our native turtles and all of us who care about them, Oklahoma has to
rein in exploitative turtle trapping.”
Commercial
traders bought nearly 1 million wild turtles from Oklahoma between 1994
and 2014, according to reports submitted by turtle buyers to the
Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. Asian food and medicinal
markets drive most of the trade. Because turtles accumulate toxins from
prey in their bodies and burrow into contaminated sediment, their 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.
Scientists
have repeatedly documented that freshwater turtles cannot sustain any
significant level of wild collection without population declines. For
example, a 2011 Oklahoma study
showed a significant reduction, in comparison to baseline data from
1997-1999, in “catch per unit of effort,” an index of turtle abundance,
across eastern Oklahoma for the three turtle species primarily targeted
by commercial trappers: common snapping turtles, softshells and
red-eared sliders.
“Commercial
trapping is devastating to turtle populations that are already
suffering from multiple other threats, including habitat loss, water
pollution and vehicular collisions,” said Michael Beilfuss, executive
committee chair for Oklahoma Chapter Sierra Club. “Unless the state bans
commercial turtle trapping, Oklahoma’s turtle populations will continue
to plummet.”
In
response to a 2008 Center petition, Oklahoma prohibited commercial
collection of turtles from the state’s public waters. That prohibition,
while an important step, insufficiently protects the state’s turtles
because approximately 95 percent of the state’s land is privately held
and therefore open to turtle trapping. And enforcement is difficult
because turtle traders can claim that turtles illegally collected from
closed public waters were collected from waters on private land.
Today’s
petition was submitted by the Center for Biological Diversity, Oklahoma
Chapter Sierra Club, Save the Illinois River and Local Environmental
Action Demanded.
Background
As part of a campaign
to protect turtles in the United States, the Center has been
petitioning states that allow commercial turtle collection to improve
their regulations. In 2009 Florida responded by banning almost all
commercial turtle collection from public and private waters. In 2012
Georgia approved state rules restricting commercial turtle collection,
and Alabama completely banned it. Most recently, in Iowa in March, new
regulations setting closed seasons and possession limits for commercial
turtle trappers went into effect.
As
for states neighboring Oklahoma, Colorado and Kansas prohibit
commercial turtle collection, and New Mexico strictly regulates it with
annual bag limits. In addition, last fall Missouri announced — in
response to a Center petition — that it will consider ending unlimited
commercial turtle collection through a formal rulemaking proceeding.
Contacts:
Collette Adkins, Center for Biological Diversity, (651) 955-3821, cadkins@biologicaldiversity.org
Michael Beilfuss, Oklahoma Chapter Sierra Club, (979) 218-8941, mbeilfuss@yahoo.com
Ed Brocksmith, Save the Illinois River, (918) 284-9440, info@illinoisriver.org
Rebecca Jim, Local Environmental Action Demanded, (918) 256-5269, rjim@neok.com
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