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Freshwater turtle harvest rule goes
into effect Oct. 23
October 10, 2008
Contact: Patricia Behnke, 850-251-2130
An additional rule restricting the harvest of
freshwater turtles goes into effect on Oct. 23. The Florida Fish
and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) passed the rule at
the September Commission meeting.
This restriction limits the harvest of wild
Florida freshwater turtles to five per day per person. Each
fisherman with a commercial license will be allowed to harvest
an additional 15 Florida softshell turtles per day, for a total
of 20 turtles per day.
“Florida softshell turtles lay more eggs than
any other freshwater turtle in North America, and this species
of freshwater turtle has sustained much higher harvest levels
for many years,” said Bill Turner, an FWC amphibian and reptile
specialist. “Over the next year we will be collecting
information and working with our stakeholders to determine the
best strategy for conservation of freshwater turtles in
Florida.”
This rule has been passed to protect freshwater
turtle populations while the FWC develops a long-term
comprehensive strategy for sustainable use of amphibian and
reptile populations. Recent reports of unusually large
freshwater turtle harvests coincide with reports that the demand
for freshwater turtles as food and pets has increased.
The additional rule limits the number of turtles
that may be taken from the wild, not from turtle farms or other
aquaculture facilities. Farmed turtles represent more than 90
percent of the total freshwater turtles exported from Florida.
No changes have been made to the number of turtles people may
possess; the existing limits still apply. Furthermore, rules
about selling or buying turtles have not changed.
“We expect to bring the strategy for freshwater
turtles back to the Commission in one year,” Turner said. “We
listened to the public, experts and fishermen and will continue
to do so during the whole process.”
This additional restriction to the existing
rules is an interim measure while the FWC works on a long-term
strategy for conservation of these species.
FWC Turtle Harvest
Regulations
- Licenses and permits are not required for taking turtles.
- Most freshwater turtles may be taken year-round manually or with baited hooks,
bows, dip nets, traps (designed so freshwater fish caught can escape) or by
spearing (from boats or shore only during daylight hours).
- Taking turtles with bucket traps, snares or shooting with firearms is
prohibited.
- Using gasoline or other chemical or gaseous substances to drive wildlife from
their retreats is prohibited.
- River cooters may not be taken from April 15 to July 31. Soft-shell turtles or
their eggs may not be taken from the wild from May 1 to July 31.
- No one can possess more than 50 eggs taken from the wild, in the aggregate, of
species of freshwater turtles native to Florida, except as authorized by permit
from the FWC executive director.
- Purchasing or selling turtle eggs taken from the wild is prohibited.
- Eggs of the following restricted turtle species are subject to the same
possession limits that apply for those turtles.
- Possession limits for turtles and eggs:
- River cooters - two
- Alligator snapping turtles - one
- Loggerhead musk turtles - two
- Box turtles - two
- Barbour’s map turtles - two
- Escambia River map turtles - two
- Diamondback terrapins - two
- No one may buy, sell or possess for sale alligator snapping turtles, box
turtles, Barbour’s map turtles, river cooters, loggerhead musk turtles, Escambia
River map turtles, diamondback terrapins or parts thereof.
- Buying, selling, taking or possessing gopher tortoises, or parts thereof, is
prohibited except by permit from the FWC executive director.
- For additional information, please visit Rule 68A-25.002(6) of the Florida
Administrative Code at https://www.flrules.org/. You may also read other wildlife regulations
by going to MyFWC.com/codebook/.
- Red-eared sliders in personal possession prior to July 1, 2007 may continue in
the possession of the owner.
- Red-eared sliders less than 4 inches carapace length may not be possessed after
July 1, 2008 without a permit.
- Red-eared sliders with distinctive aberrant color patterns, including albino or
amelanistic specimens, may be possessed without a permit.
Nonnative species that are released into the
wild are often undesirable because of their potential to
transmit diseases, compete or interbreed with Florida's native
wildlife. To minimize these problems, Florida Statute 379.231
prohibits the release of nonnative animals. Therefore,
relocating nonnative animals into a wild situation is not an
appropriate solution to disposing of unwanted pets.
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