Press
Release NYSDEC-9/19/21
The New
York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and Commissioner
Basil Seggos announced today that the agency is adopting regulations to
eliminate commercial harvest of diamondback terrapins and add the species to
the list of native turtles with no open season.
The
closure on harvest will go into effect beginning May 1, 2018.
“Diamondback
terrapins depend upon a steady diet of mollusks and crustaceans, making them an
excellent indicator for the health of New York’s estuarine habitats,”
Commissioner Seggos said. “If diamondback terrapins are doing well in a bay,
you know you have a healthy population of blue mussels, clams, and blue crabs,
too. Closing the hunting season is an important step in the conservation of diamondback
terrapin populations in New York.”
Diamondback
terrapins are a turtle species that live in brackish waters associated with the
lower Hudson River, Long Island Sound, Peconic Bay, and the coastal embayments
along the south shore of Long Island. The diamondback terrapin was identified
as a Species of Greatest Conservation Need in the 2015 New York State Wildlife
Action Plan due to documented threats from habitat loss, nest predation, and
incidental capture. The turtles are sometimes accidentally trapped in crab pots
and other commercial fishing gear.
Populations
of diamondback terrapins plummeted in the early 20th Century due to unregulated
harvest for turtle soup. After a rebound throughout most of the last century,
new declines in diamondback terrapin populations along the Atlantic Coast led
to the closure of commercial harvest in all states in the terrapin’s range with
the exception of New York.
The
current action closes commercial harvest of terrapins throughout their range.
In addition to closing New York’s open season, the diamondback terrapin has
been added to the list of native turtles to protect all life stages of the
species from being collected from the wild. DEC will continue to evaluate and
pursue additional actions to improve the status of the diamondback terrapin
populations in New York.
The final
diamondback terrapin season will close April 30, 2018, with licenses expiring
May 4, 2018.