![]() ![]() In January 2020 the Center for Biological Diversity, Florida Turtle Conservation Trust and Diamondback Terrapin Working Group filed a petition asking Florida’s wildlife commission to require bycatch reduction devices on all recreational and commercial blue crab traps in state waters. Threats include habitat destruction and degradation, crab-pot mortality, sea-level rise caused by climate change, pollution, boat strikes, collection for commercial and personal purposes, and inadequate regulatory measures to address these threats. The International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List ranks the diamondback terrapin’s global status as vulnerable and describes its population trend as decreasing. Florida also has the most coastal habitat of all the states in the species’ range. There are currently seven recognized subspecies of diamondback terrapin, and Florida is home to five, three of which only live there. The terrapin is potentially a keystone species in salt marshes and mangroves, helping to maintain their ecological health. They live in coastal marshes and other estuarine habitats, where they primarily feed on snails, clams, mussels and small crabs. Backgroundĭiamondback terrapins are known for stunning diamond-patterned shells and speckled skin. Experts agree that blue crab traps pose the greatest threat to the diamondback terrapin’s existence. Abandoned or lost traps, also called ghost traps, can capture terrapins by the dozen. These estuaries are also home to blue crabs, which are trapped in crab pots by an active blue crab fishery.īaited blue crab traps are known to trap and drown terrapins, while commercial fleets of traps can steadily remove individual turtles until a population can’t sustain itself. The experts emphasized that a fleet of blue crab traps is capable of removing enough individual terrapins to cause population declines - or wipe them out completely.ĭiamondback terrapins, found along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts from Massachusetts to Texas, are the only turtles in the world that live exclusively in coastal estuaries. ![]() Leading international turtle experts also urged Florida to require excluder devices on all crab traps in state waters based on the existing science. In a 2020 statement, the Diamondback Terrapin Working Group, an organization of academics, scientists, and regulators working to promote terrapin conservation, concluded that scientific data is “abundant and clear”: Commercial and recreational blue crab traps threaten terrapin populations, and bycatch reduction devices effectively reduce terrapin deaths with minimal effect on crab catch. The commission’s study of Florida’s commercial blue crab fishery follows a large existing body of science on terrapin interactions with blue crab traps. “While requiring their use on recreational traps is a good step forward, it only begins to address the problem.” Heinrich, executive director of the Florida Turtle Conservation Trust. “The conservation community recognizes that the single greatest action that the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission can do would be to require the use of bycatch-reduction devices on all crab traps used in Florida waters,” said George L. “To protect our precious terrapins, the commission needs to finish what it started and revisit protections in the commercial fishery too.” “It’s a relief to know Florida’s terrapins will get a reprieve from recreational blue crab traps, but the threat from commercial crab traps still looms large,” said Elise Bennett, Florida director at the Center for Biological Diversity. The commission website indicates this research is complete, but the agency has not revisited protective rules. When approving the recreational traps rule in 2021, the commission postponed consideration of similar requirements for the commercial blue crab fishery until commission staff completed a study of terrapin interactions with the fishery, despite abundant evidence that commercial crabbing also threatens terrapins. Under the new rule, all recreational blue crab traps must have rigid entrances of no more than 2 inches by 6 inches or bycatch reduction devices, or “BRDs,” of the same size. But the commission has yet to consider badly needed protections in the commercial blue crab fishery. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission rule stems from nearly two years of advocacy and a petition filed by conservationists and turtle experts. ![]() TALLAHASSEE, Fla.- A new rule aimed at protecting diamondback terrapin turtles from drowning in recreational blue crab traps will go into effect Wednesday, March 1. ![]()
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