Mary Kay Magistad

Mary Kay Magistad

Mary Kay Magistad has been The World's Beijing-based East Asia correspondent since 2002, focusing especially on a rapidly changing China and the impact of China's rise on the region and the world.

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Sea Turtle Poaching and High Demand in China

Hawksbill Turtle (Photo: Tom Doeppner/Wiki Commons)

Hawksbill Turtle (Photo: Tom Doeppner/Wiki Commons)

China has a taste for turtle; turtle soup, turtle eggs, turtle bone ground up for use in Chinese medicine to promote longevity – for people, not for the turtles.

But as Chinese waters are increasingly depleted of sea turtles, Chinese poachers are going further afield to find them. That includes hunting in waters that both China and the Philippines claim, like the waters around the Philippine island of Palawan.

The area is home to the endangered hawksbill sea turtle, a species so ancient it predates some dinosaurs. It can grow to be as large as one meter across, according to Glenda Cadigal, of the Palawan Council on Sustainable Development.

“It lays 1,000 eggs,” she said, “and when it lays the eggs in one area, all the hatchlings that hatch from that area will go back to the same spot to lay its eggs at the time it is mature.”

But fewer turtles are making the journey of late, she said. She estimates that their population around Palawan is down about 20 percent from a decade ago, because of poaching, mostly by Chinese.

Sea turtle entangled in net (Photo: NOAA/Wiki Commons)

Sea turtle entangled in net (Photo: NOAA/Wiki Commons)

“They are poached not just for meat, but also for the value of their turtle shell, which is used for almost anything — for accessories, for guitar picks, bags, you name it and they will do it.” Cadigal said for some Chinese families, it’s a status symbol to have a stuffed marine turtle on display in their homes.

Cadigal said that some Chinese boats caught near Palawan had tools onboard for stuffing turtles.

The Philippine navy, which patrols those waters, captured a Chinese boat of poachers in December. The boat had two big outboard motors, according to Giovanni Bacordo, deputy commander of the Philippine Armed Forces, Naval Forces West. He said it tried to ram the patrol boat, and then it fled.

“So we gave chase for about 19 minutes until their outboard motors bogged down,” Bacordo said. “While we were giving chase, they were throwing away some equipment overboard, and maybe some dead sea turtles, we don’t know. But the following day, we recovered a fishing net, weighing about a ton, and three more dead sea turtles. So all in all, we recovered nine dead sea turtles, and three live ones.”

Six Chinese were arrested. The alleged poachers said they came from China’s Hainan province, more than 600 miles away. There’s a thriving black market there in sea turtles — a single sea turtle can go for $3,000.

Chinese police in Hainan do periodically crack down on turtle poaching. Still, General Juancho Sabban, who heads the entire Philippine Armed Forces Western Command, suggests the Chinese poachers aren’t operating entirely on their own. He thinks they must have a mother ship, perhaps just commercial, and perhaps not. He said some Chinese poachers have befriended Palawan locals, and have even offered to buy sea turtles from them, which makes him suspicious, as a military man.

“By doing so, they are able to step on Philippine soil, befriending the populace, which to us in the military is a very common ploy in a more advanced planning. You have to immerse and know the local culture, as well as mingle with them and establishing a support base,” Sabban said.

So far, there’s no proven link between the poachers and the Chinese military. But other Chinese fishing boats have been known to lay down markers in contested waters near here.

As for the accused poachers, the six caught in December await trial. China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman has said China is watching, and wants the Philippines to treat them fairly. Glenda Cadigal of the Palawan Council for Sustainable Development said, if anything, Chinese poachers in the past have been treated too fairly. They’ve been allowed to post bail and leave — or the Chinese embassy posts bail for them.

“I’m not into the bailing, because the lives of these wildlife species – you just pay a certain amount, and then you’re free? For me, it’s not fair,” Cadigal said. “They don’t have their voices, and we should be the ones protecting them.”

There’s now a group in Hainan called “SeaTurtles 911,” which is trying to rescue captured sea turtles, and spread awareness in China that hunting endangered turtles is bad for the environment.

But demand lingers, and the supply near Palawan seems too tempting for poachers to resist – especially with the Chinese government insisting that these waters are China’s to exploit.

Discussion

8 comments for “Sea Turtle Poaching and High Demand in China”

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/7ETUUMZWIWT7GO7ZL7Q4OS7X3E Charles

    I know this is not PC but is there a worse country than China out there?  Really, are any other countries trying to decimate our planet and the contained resources with anything resembling the vile greed of China?

    • eva rock

      Um, yes… USA. After all, China’s vile greed is only serving the grotesque demand of America. When the western world stops wanting things they don’t need, China will have no market. 

      • UnZen

        I agree with eva. The U.S. (and Europe and Canada) started it, but one has to admit that China is taking it to a new level. When you take into account the exponential possibilities of destruction due to the incredible scale of their population, it becomes scary. And the fact that they are blatantly ignoring the lessons learned from our own arrogant, ignorant and avaricious history leaves them open to judgement. So Charles; don’t worry about seeming not PC. If we and everything else on this planet are going to survive, this sort of thing must be addressed in public forums. It’s not racist. It’s imperative.

  • Anonymous

    I know this is not PC but is there a worse country than UNITED STATE OF AMERICA out there?
     Really, are any other countries trying to decimate our planet and the
    contained resources with anything resembling the vile greed of UNITED STATE OF AMERICA?
    OMG look at cuba! a prison with 15 year old children? build by the baby killer white amerians?
    I mean for god sakes these american use to to inject their own citizen with uranium! URANIUM! not to mention these so call people tested over 100 nuclear bombs over the atmosphere in the south pacific!! THE PHILIPPINE’s back yard!! what kind of people do such a thing??? you know who….AMERICANS!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Youngun-Song/100003323732183 Youngun Song
  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=637761862 Margrit Harris

    So sad… these are such beautiful turtles. I’m on the East Coast of the USA right now and they have them at the local aquarium where they also have a rehab center and education program. Had no idea that plastic grocery bags are harmful to them! They swallow them thinking they are jelly fish supposedly… their tummies feel full and they starve.

    Thanks for bringing the poaching plight to our attention. I’ve also lived in the Philippines and … so sad how the environment is exploited.

    At http://www.Nikela.org we try to do our small part to protect wildlife. 

  • UnZen

    The Chinese are going to eat the entire planet. In addition to being pointlessly xenophobic, they are environmentally barbaric. Tigers will be poached into extinction because some ignorant Chinese hillbillies think that eating tiger penis makes them virile. The same with bear gall bladder. There’s already near 1.5 billion Chinese on the planet, I don’t think erectile dysfunction is the problem. The problem is ignorance and selfishness. 
    Then there are the Sharks. They’re being tortured and wiped out for soup. Sick. And now sea turtles. God only know what other twisted notions they have that result in genocide. Does this sound racist? Probably, but that doesn’t make it any less true. Sometimes it’s incumbent upon a culture to re-evaluate some of it’s traditions clean out the stupid.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001957421024 John VanDruff Kenneth

    America sucks.. Hell, all of humanity sucks for the most part.. Most of us are like what you guys are describing countries as.. We need to be like we were before, and restore the balance to the ecosystem. We lived a good long while as Native Americans and other such civilizations.