The strategy to make the harvest legal was that the turtles regularly dig up each others’ eggs, causing destruction not only to those eggs, but, due to bacterial decomposition of the broken eggs, gross contamination of the surrounding sand. By selling the turtle eggs, locals could benefit economically, while protecting the species.
However, real sustainability does not come when a species has found its way onto the illegal black market. And turtles that do survive are at risk from being killed for their meat, choking on plastic bafs, and getting caught in fishing nets.
I ask Costa Rica to return to the originat law, which
banned the taking of turtle eggs nationwide in 1966.
The Law for the
Protection, Conservation and Recuperation of the Marine Turtle Population (Law
8325), was established in 2002 and designed to help protect declining sea turtle
numbers, mandates three years of prison for anyone who “kills, hunts, captures,
decapitates, or disturbs marine turtles.”
Sincerely,
SOURCE:http://coastalcare.org/2011/07/legalized-poaching-turtles-eggs-and-playa-ostional-costa-rica/
