World Turtle News, 09/11/2019

How a turtle tunnel is saving lives In Wisconsin, the State Highway 66 runs straight through Plover River, a bustling habitat for freshwater turtles. This means the busy highway is a big risk to turtles and other wildlife trying to cross it to reach the other side of their natural habitat. In 2015 alone, 66 turtles were killed attempting to cross. So, when this road […]

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World Turtle News, 09/10/2019

Two men nabbed, over 600 turtle eggs seized Two men have been arrested for illegally stealing and selling turtle eggs. The Sarawak Forestry Corporation (SFC) enforcement team nabbed the two men at Pasar Tamu Kubah Ria, Malaysia on Saturday! The first suspect, aged 65, was caught with over 200 eggs at 9:45am which were later seized. Similarly, in the afternoon another whopping 438 sea turtle

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World Turtle News, 09/06/2019

Florida State University thinks climate change could bring short-term gain, long-term pain for loggerhead sea turtles New research from conservation biologists at Florida State University and their collaborators suggests that while some loggerheads will suffer from the effects of a changing climate, populations in certain nesting areas could stand to reap important short-term benefits from the shifting environmental conditions. In an investigation of 17 loggerhead

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World Turtle News, 09/05/2019

Letter to the Editor: Will the BLM help or harm threatened Mojave desert tortoises? 1990, the mojave desert tortoise was officially listed as a threatened and declining species under the federal Endangered Species Act. Despite being placed under this legal protection, this species along with many others still continue to decline. Under this Act, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and other agencies must

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World Turtle News, 09/03/2019

70 rare Assam temple turtle hatchlings released in ‘Mini Kaziranga’ 70 rare and endangered freshwater turtles of two species; the black softshell (Nilssonia nigricans) and indian softshell turtles (Nilssonia gangetica), were released yesterday in the Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary. These turtles were bred in the ponds of two temples in Assam, an area of India with high turtle biodiversity. The restocking of these two species was

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World Turtle News, 09/01/2019

Hurricane Dorian could wash sea turtle nests out to sea amid promising nesting season The hurricane is hitting just as beaches are moving from egg-laying season into hatching season, said Grace Dotson, senior scientist at Ecological Associates, which monitors sea turtle nests on sections of shoreline throughout the Treasure Coast. “We still have a few nests being laid,” she said, “but we’re getting a lot

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World Turtle News, 08/30/2019

As recorded fires in the Amazon rainforest climb, Brazil’s citizens wait for government to fight illegal deforestation and end burning “The number of fires in the Amazon biome topped 41,858 in 2019 as of August 24 (up from 22,000 this time last year). Scientists are especially concerned about wildfires raging inside protected areas, such as Jamanxim National Forest in Pará state and Mato Grosso’s Serra

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World Turtle News, 08/29/2019

CITES CoP18 ends; among many amendments made, 5 turtle species moved from Appendix II to Appendix I (You can see the entire list of decisions made regarding proposals here) “The Conference revised the trade rules for dozens of wildlife species that are threatened by unstainable trade linked to overharvesting, overfishing or overhunting. These ranged from commercially valuable fish and trees to charismatic mammals such as

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World Turtle News, 08/27/2019

Research shows invasive red-eared slider turtles compete with native turtles for resources A recent study conducted at UC Davis Arboretum found that invasive red-eared sliders (RES) (Trachemys scripta elegans) strongly compete with native western pond turtles (Actinemys marmorata) for several resources. 117 RES were removed from this habitat during the study and researchers discovered that western pond turtles gained on average 40 grams in weight

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