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Smuggled in Suitcases, 8,000 Pig-Nosed Turtles Rescued in Indonesia

More than 8,000 baby pig-nosed turtles being smuggled out of Indonesia were intercepted this week by officials, according to an AFP report.

The turtles were found hidden in suitcases thought to be destined for Singapore and China, where the reptiles are sold as exotic pets and occasionally end up in food markets.

Friday officials at Jakarta’s main airport discovered nearly 3,000 of the turtles in four suitcases after being told to be on the lookout for turtle smuggling. Thursday officials in Papua, one of the few places in the world where pig-nosed turtles occur naturally, found a cache of about 5,400 of the turtles hidden in seven suitcases, the AFP reported.

The suitcases contained plastic boxes, each containing 15-20 turtles. All of the living turtles were collected and will be released back into their natural habitat in Papua. At least 14 of the turtles were dead when officials found them, according to the AFP.

The pig-nosed turtle (Carettochelys insculpta) is classified as a vulnerable species by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which reports that the species is only found in Papua New Guinea, northern Australia and Indonesia’s Papua region.

The IUCN states that the species is exported in large numbers as part of the international live animal trade. “It is heavily exploited and locally consumed in Papua New Guinea and endangered by habitat loss and degradation in Australia,” the IUCN said of the major threats to the pig-nosed turtle.

According to EarthTimes.org, the population of Indonesia’s pig-nosed turtles has fallen by 50 percent in the last three decades, adding that 11,000 of the reptiles were illegally transported out of Indonesia last year.

Smuggling turtles out of Indonesia carries a penalty of as many as 3 years in prison and fines of up to 150 million rupiah (about $12,300), according to the Jakarta Post.

However, the payoff for a successful smuggling operation may be too tempting for some to pass by.

A 15-centimeter specimen can sell for $20 and juvenile and adult pig-nosed turtles can fetch between $500 and $2,000, according to the Jakarta Post.

 

Source : natureworldnews.com

Over 8,000 pig-nosed turtles rescued in Indonesia

In this picture taken on Jan. 9, 2014, an official holds baby pig-nosed turtles in Tangerang, Banten province. The vulnerable creatures were destined for markets in Singapore or China. AFP photo

Indonesian officials said Jan. 10 they have rescued more than 8,000 baby pig-nosed turtles hidden in suitcases and thought to be destined for China and Singapore. A total of 2,968 were discovered in four suitcases at the airport serving the capital Jakarta after arriving from the remote eastern Papua region, said Zaenal Abidi, quarantine official.

“The suitcases were full of plastic boxes holding 15 to 20 turtles each. Sadly, 14 of them were dead on arrival,” he said.

Airport officials were asked Jan. 9 to be on the look-out for pig-nosed turtles — classified as vulnerable — after 5,400 of the creatures were discovered in seven suitcases in Papua, he said.

Abidi said that pig-nosed turtles smuggled through Jakarta are usually sent to Singapore or China, where they are sold as exotic pets and sometimes end up in food markets.

All the turtles would be returned to their natural habitat in Papua, Abidi said. He added that police knew who had checked in the luggage but their whereabouts were now unknown.

The pig-nosed turtle is only found in Australia and New Guinea, an island shared between Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, and is protected under Indonesian conservation laws.

It has a distinctive snout-like nose and webbed feet. The International Union for Conservation of Nature lists the pig-nosed turtle as vulnerable and trade of the species is restricted.

 

Source: www.hurriyetdailynews.com

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