A Model for the Future Conservation of Southeast Asian Turtles |
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Research: Le Thien Duc records daily ecology
notes. (Click on photo for details.)
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The decline of turtle and tortoise populations worldwide has caused serious concern among scientists and wildlife conservationists for more than twenty years. But in the decade of the 90s, with Chinas transition to a market economy and its increased affluence, the age-old traditional use of turtles for food and medicine increased dramatically. The impact of the Chinese market on the already precarious status of Asian turtle populations has reached disastrous proportions (see The Asian Turtle Crisis).
But the Cuc Phuong Conservation Project (and its Turtle Conservation and Ecology Project) in Vietnam may very well be a model for future programs to save the turtles of Southeast Asia. The greater Cuc Phuong Project, established in 1996, is a multifaceted conservation initiative, implemented and administered by Fauna and Flora International (FFI) in cooperation with Cuc Phuong National Park and the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD).
Major project components include a community-based conservation education program active in 35 schools and 15 communes surrounding the park, a socioeconomic research program to examine the relationship between local communities and forest resource use, a visitor education program targeting the parks 40,000 annual visitors, and biological research on the parks fauna and flora.
The Cuc Phuong Conservation Project manages two species conservation programs for wildlife threatened by the illegal trade: the Owstons Palm Civet (Chrotogale owstoni) Conservation Program and the Turtle Conservation and Ecology Project.
The Turtle Conservation and Ecology Project, focusing on tortoises and freshwater turtles confiscated from the trade, was initiated in 1998. Since then it has developed steadily, and in the summer of 1999, with official endorsement from the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Turtle Project was formally integrated into the larger Cuc Phuong Conservation Project, making it the first official tortoise and freshwater turtle conservation program in Vietnam. For more details about the scope, goals, and activities of this important conservation effort, see the newsletters and reports below.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT: The Conservation Awareness Program has helped raise conservation awareness among 15,300 children living in the vicinty of Cuc Phuong National Park, and Vu Thi Quyens work has produced pioneers in community-based environmental education.
Vu Thi Quyen Receives Maurice Laing Award
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Turtle Conservation Vietnam,
Newsletter of the Turtle Conservation and Ecology Project (TCEP)
Volume I, Issue 2, January 1, 2001
Turtle Conservation Vietnam,
Newsletter of the Turtle Conservation and Ecology Project (TCEP)
Volume I, Issue 1, July 1, 2000
Cuc Phuong Report: News from the Cuc Phuong Conservation Project
(Volume III, Issue 2, May 31, 2000)
View/download PDF* copy of this report.
Download MSWord copy of this report.
Cuc Phuong Report: News from the Cuc Phuong Conservation Project
(Volume III, Issue 1, January 2000)
View/download PDF* copy of this report.
Download MSWord copy of this report.
PROJECT AND WILDLIFE REPORTS: |
INDEX |
Report to TRAFFIC: Compiled Notes on the Wildlife Trade in Vietnam (June 1September 30, 2000)
View/download PDF* copy of this report.
Download MSWord copy of this report.
The Turtle Conservation and Ecology Project (January 2000)
View/download PDF* copy of this report.
Download MSWord copy of this report.
Report to TRAFFIC SEA: Compiled Notes on the
Wildlife Trade in Vietnam (JanuaryMay 2000)
Link to Web page version of this report.
View/download PDF* copy of this report.
Download MSWord copy of this report.
Report to TRAFFIC Vietnam: Compiled Notes on the
Wildlife Trade in Vietnam (NovemberDecember 1999)
Link to Web page version of this report.
View/download PDF* copy of this report.
Download MSWord copy of this report.
Report to TRAFFIC Vietnam: Compiled Notes on the
Wildlife Trade in Vietnam (October 1999)
Link to Web page version of this report.
View/download PDF* copy of this report.
Download MSWord copy of this report.
Trade Action Report, Ninh Binh Seizure (July 1999)
Link to Web page version of this report.
View/download PDF* copy of this report.
Download MSWord copy of this report.
RELATED NEWS ARTICLES: (links open new browser windows) |
INDEX |
Vietnam’s Vanishing Primates
(November 15, 2000)
Link to article: The New York Times (free with registration)
Center for Biodiversity and Conservation Newsletter, Fall 2000
(entire newsletter reproduced courtesy of the CBC, American Museum of Natural History)
Links to articles related to Vietnam:
Turtles in Trouble
The Conservation Education Network
Viet Nam: Filling in the Gaps
Interpreting Biodiversity in Viet Nam
Vietnam Highway Hits Bump on the Road
(July 28, 2002)
Link to article: Washington Post
Elevated Highway to Plough Through Vietnam National Park
(November 3, 2000)
Link to article: Deutsche Presse-Agentur
The Flawed Forests of Cuc Phuong
(September 20, 2000)
Link to article: Japan Times Online
Environmentalists say Vietnamese Highway a Threat
(August 15, 2000)
Link to article: Planet Ark (Reuters Environment News)
Vietnamese Highway Project Hits Green Roadblocks
(August 22, 2000)
Link to article online: IGC EcoNet
Vietnam: Highway Project Would Gravely Affect Protected Areas
June, 2000)
Link to article online: World Rainforest Movement, Montevideo, Uraguay
RELATED WEB SITES: (links open new browser windows) |
INDEX |
Melbourne Zoo Asian Turtle Crisis and Cuc Phuong Turtle Project Web site
Melbourne Zoo provides support to address the Asian Turtle Crisis and has been actively involved in this conservation program since 1998.
The Cuc Phuong Turtle Project
Wildlife Volunteer Fund
A volunteer organization headquartered in Japan for anyone who wishes to help conserve wildlife and wildlife habitats around the world. WVF provides direct support to the Cuc Phuong Conservation Project (see link from home page).
Wildlife Volunteer Fund
MekongInfo
An interactive Web-based system for sharing information and knowledge related to natural resource management in Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam.
www.MekongInfo.org
Vietnam Science, Technology and Environment Page
Committed to saving Vietnam's environment, assisting Vietnamese scientists find solutions to development problems, and to helping people in the countryside to make a living without degrading their environment.
Vietnam Science, Technology and Environment Page
The destruction of Vietnams natural resources today is at a critical point.
For pages on this site devoted to the the effects of wildlife trafficking as well as threats to ecosystems in Vietnam, go directly to:
Wild Trade Vietnam
And of particular importance, for research as well as general interest, is a page of document links covering wildlife trade and natural resource inventory and management:
Documents, WWW Links and Comments on Wildife Trade
Conservation Education Network (CEN) Vietnam
CEN is a world-wide forum for exchange of scholarly, factual information on conservation education in Viet Nam (in Vietnamese and English). To subscribe to CEN, send an e-mail message to majordomo@vn-gw.net.vn with the body text reading:
subscribe cen <your email address>
Australia Vietnam Science, Technology, and Environment Listserve Discussion Group
The AVSL-L Discussion Group is a list for the exchange of professional and scientific information (in English). To subscribe to AVSL-L, send an e-mail message to majordomo@coombs.anu.edu.au with the body text reading:
subscribe avsl-l <your email address>
The Tortoise Reserve Joins Asian Turtle Conservation Effort
The AZA Chelonian Advisory Group and the Australian Association of Zoological Parks and Aquaria have identified the Cuc Phuong Turtle Conservation and Ecology Project as a primary site for urgently needed regional conservation of Asian turtles.
To help raise funds for Asian turtle conservation (and at this time all monies will be directed to the Cuc Phuong Conservation Project), the Tortoise Reserve has set up an account at the Tennessee Aquarium to receive donations for Cuc Phuong. To jumpstart the effort, the Tortoise Reserve will match any one donation up to $1,000 from a herpetological or turtle and tortoise society. Contributions in any amount are encouraged, all will be acknowledged, and all contributions are tax deductible. Contributors will receive periodic updates on the programs progress. Donations should be made payable to the Asian Turtle Conservation Program and sent to the attention of Dave Collins, Asian Turtle Conservation Program Coordinator, Tennessee Aquarium, PO Box 11048, Chattanooga, TN 37401, USA. E-mail:
dec@tennis.org. Visit the Tortoise Reserve Web site: www.tortoisereserve.org.
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* To view and print PDF (Portable Document Format) documents, you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed on your system. If you dont already have Acrobat Reader, follow this link to download your free copy now.
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Contacts:
Douglas Hendrie, Cuc Phuong Conservation Project Director: dhendrie@fpt.vn
Dave Collins, Asian Turtle Conservation Program Coordinator: dec@tennis.org
Jim Van Abbema, NYTTS, this Web site: jvanabbema@nytts.org
This site is sponsored by the New York Turtle and Tortoise Society: nytts.org
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Click on thumbnail pictures for details
and full-size view.
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Turtle enclosures at the Center
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Delivering plants for turtle enclosures
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Indotestudo elongata hatching at the Center
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Conservation Awareness Program
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Children tour the Conservation Center
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Workshop for Ninh Binh rangers
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Soc Son rangers identify turtles
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Rangers' seize shipment of Cyclemys
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A seized shipment of Malayemys
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