August
9th 2007
Turtle conservation efforts in China making progress, say experts

Posted under Conservation

Close to 10 million turtles are traded each year in Asian food markets despite global efforts to stem the practice that many experts say is causing the rapid extinction of some species of the shelled reptiles.The centuries-old practice of using turtles for food and medicinal purposes — particularly in China — is a $700 million (€509 million) industry, Chinese conservationist Shi Haitao said during an international turtle expert meeting Thursday.

The number of conservationists working in China pales in comparison to the scope of the problem, he said.

“I realize there is a long road ahead, even though the situation of turtle conservation in China is improving,” Shi said.

He spoke to nearly 200 experts from across the globe who gathered in Atlanta for the joint meeting of the Turtle Survival Alliance and the World Conservation Union’s tortoise and freshwater turtle specialist group.

Some markets are selling fewer turtles than they did a decade ago. The Qingping market in Guangzhou, China, has seen an 80 percent decrease in the number of turtles sold since 10 years ago, Shi said.

But the country still has no centers to house animals rescued from food markets or turtle breeding farms and has no nature reserves that can help build populations of critically endangered species, Shi said.

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