02/02/2006 - Jakarta, Indonesia – According to a new report
by TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network, trade
in Roti Island snake-necked turtles is leading this endemic
species, found only in the wetlands of eastern Indonesia,
to the brink of extinction. The report noted that despite
national quotas set for the harvest and export of this turtle
species between 1997 and 2001, no licences for collection
have been issued to date, nor transport permits issued for
movement from source to point-of-export within Indonesia.
All specimens that have been exported since 1994 have been
illegally acquired; often exported illegally under a similar
species, the New Guinea snake-necked turtle.
In 2000, the IUCN Red List categorized the Roti Island
snake-necked turtle (Chelodina mccordi) as “critically endangered”,
and is listed in Appendix II of CITES, which requires any
international trade to be carried out under a permit system.
“The continuing international demand for the turtle from
hobbyists and collectors in Europe, North America and east
Asia is pushing this endemic species towards extinction,”
said Chris Shepherd from TRAFFIC Southeast Asia and co-author
of the report.
“Even if the turtle is added to the Indonesian list of
protected species, monitoring and enforcement of existing
laws in place to protect wildlife from over-exploitation
is lacking and in some places, non-existent. If these laws
are not enforced, this species will surely become extinct
in the wild in the very near future.”
The new report issues a number of recommendations, including
better national protection and capacity building for increased
and improved enforcement. In December 2005, TRAFFIC, in
close collaboration with the Indonesian CITES Management
Authority, conducted training and awareness building sessions
on Roti Island for local enforcement agencies, including
from nearby Timor.
"We hope that by increasing the levels of awareness
and the capacity in enforcement techniques of these agencies,
poachers will find it increasingly difficult to smuggle
out any of the turtles that remain on Roti Island,"
Shepherd added.
END NOTES:
• The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species
of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) regulates international
trade in more than 30,000 species of wild animals and plants.
The convention is currently applied in 167 nations, including
Indonesia.
• Support for the training and awareness building workshop
conducted on Roti Island for local enforcement agencies
in December 2005 was made possible by the Turtle Conservation
Fund and WWF-US.
• TRAFFIC — a joint programme of WWF and IUCN — works to
ensure that trade in wild plants and animals is not a threat
to the conservation of nature. |