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WRR Home > Media Room > Press Releases & Articles from WRR > Texas Turtles Shell-Shocked by Trade: TPWD may ban exploitation, shielding Texas turtles from global appetites, pet trade.

For Immediate Release
Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Texas Turtles Shell-Shocked by Trade
TPWD may ban exploitation, shielding Texas turtles from global appetites, pet trade.

Kendalia, TX – Wednesday, May 16, 2007 – With turtle populations throughout Asia thoroughly ravaged for their prized flesh, foreign food vendors have turned to Texas to satisfy the increasingly affluent Chinese market. Even as three of every four native Asian turtles are threatened with extinction, a silent trade in turtles — for both pets and meat — has grown in the Lone Star State.

Designated "non-game" animals, Texas turtles have been long overlooked by state regulators. Overlooked, that is, until the reality of the global market came calling.

Local biologists, backyard naturalists, and nature lovers began their campaigns to save our declining turtles populations years ago, but Texas Parks & Wildlife Commissioners are only now acknowledging the real threat of becoming the new Asia — as far as turtles are concerned.

To prevent that, Commissioners have proposed a complete ban on the turtle trade. If approved at their May 24 meeting, Texas will join the states of Alabama, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Tennessee in commercial bans.

"We must take every action in our power to protect this all–too-often forgotten community of wildlife," said Lynn Cuny, founder and executive director of Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation. "These silent and gentle creatures deserve our protection. We must act today to ensure their future in the wilds of this state that has for eons been their home."

Since turtles mature later in life — sometimes taking a decade or more to breed — they are especially vulnerable to aggressive hunting practices.

Officials don't have precise data on the trade in Texas turtles, but it is believed that as many as 100,000 native Texas turtles are collected and shipped from the state each year. The exotic pet trade plays a significant role, too, as vast numbers of 14 different Texas species fill aquariums around the world.

Intense suffering is inherent in this exploitive system, with turtles packed atop each other in large crates as they are shipped around the world without concern for the pain and death this generates. Many turtles are crushed by the weight of their peers.

Once they arrive at market, many are hung by holes in their shells — which are living, feeling bone — to show them off to the public, according to the Gulf Coast Turtle & Tortoise Society.

Unfortunately, the Commissioners' plan to protect turtles does not extend to other "non-game" animals similarly exploited by the exotic food and pet trades. The majority of our lizards, snakes, amphibians, and a good number of ground-dwelling mammals are still considered fair game to these unscrupulous "collectors."

Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation urges each of you to speak out for Texas turtles. Write the Commissioners before their meeting Thursday, May 24, to put your comments on the record.

Comments may be e-mailed to robert.macdonald@tpwd.state.tx.us, or submitted by parcel post to Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, 4200 Smith School Road, Austin, TX 78744.

 


About Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation

Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation (WRR) (www.wildlife-rescue.org) was founded in 1977 in San Antonio by Lynn Cuny. Our mission is to provide rescue, rehabilitation, and release of orphaned, injured, and displaced wildlife, and provide sanctuary with dignity for non-releasable and non-native wild animals who have been the victims of the exotic pet trade, rescued from roadside zoos, or used in research. Today WRR volunteers and staff annually receive 5,000–6,000 animals at our 187-acre sanctuary outside Kendalia, Texas. Over 600 wild and farmed animals make their permanent home at WRR.

Contact Information

For more information about Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation's sanctuary operations or educational programs visit www.wildlife-rescue.org or contact Education & Advocacy Coordinator Gregory Harman at education@wildlife-rescue.org or (830) 336-2725.

 

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