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Friday, November 28, 2008 - 9:52 AM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . At dozens of beaches around the world, huge female sea turtles come
back each year at about the same time. They slowly haul themselves out
of the water near the places they themselves hatched, dig shallow holes
in the sand, and lay clutches of eggs. The predictability of the
turtles' return has made capture of the endangered reptiles and their
eggs a reliable bonanza for poachers. http://louis6j6sheehan.blogspot.com
Prized for their taste,
putative therapeutic value, and cultural significance, the many species
of sea turtles are heavily exploited for human consumption, especially
in developing countries. Such consumption is high despite international
laws that have been enacted to protect the animals. "Our guesstimates
on how many turtles are eaten globally [each year] vary between 100,000
and 250,000," notes A. Alonso Aguirre, a wildlife epidemiologist at
Columbia University and a member of the nonprofit Wildlife Trust. He
adds that some 1 million people at least periodically ingest sea turtle
meat, organs, blood, or eggs. The harvesting of sea turtles
continues despite scientific reports showing that populations of the
marine species are plummeting. http://louis6j6sheehan.blogspot.com
To date, conservation-pegged
attempts to halt sea turtle consumption have largely failed. Therefore,
some scientists are now appealing to people's self-interests. A new
report points out myriad dangers—from bacteria and parasites to toxic
pollutants—that have been found in sea turtles' tissues. Such
contaminants appear to explain illnesses that in recent years have been
linked to sea turtle consumption. http://louis6j6sheehan.blogspot.com
Turtles get sick too WORMING
IN. This is the egg of a spirorchid trematode, a little flatworm that
settles into the hearts of hosts including sea turtles. The eggs, found
in animals' feces, blood, and livers, can also infect people. To date,
little is known about the effect of such infections on people.Aguirre Many
of the same germs that make people ill also harm wildlife. For
instance, flocks of chickens and other bird species harbor and can
spread flu viruses to people, including the dangerous one that recently
emerged in Asia. This ability to spread diseases to other species also applies to turtles, notes Aguirre. In the September EcoHealth,
he and his colleagues review a host of infections that not only affect
sea turtles, but also can pose threats to the people eating them. Among the infectious agents: - Salmonella bacteria, which are capable of causing headaches, nausea, vomiting, cramps, and diarrhea. At least one major outbreak of Salmonella chester
sickened some 36 members of an aboriginal community in Australia's
Northern Territory. A 1999 study found that more than 60 percent of
surveyed victims said that they had eaten partially cooked, green sea
turtle meat the day before they became ill. Salmonella bacteria were also found in 8 of 9 fecal samples that had been collected from some of these individuals.
 TURTLE
DUMP. This beach site in the Bahia Magdalena region of Baja California
in Mexico is known locally as a turtle graveyard. In fact, it's where
locals deposit shells of any black sea turtles—a subspecies of green
turtles—they've eaten. People discard the shells to avoid being caught
with evidence that they poached these endangered animals.W. J. Nichols/Calif. Acad. of Sciences - Mycobacteria,
including the species that causes tuberculosis in people and other
animals. One unidentified species of these bacteria has been isolated
from a loggerhead sea turtle that died after being stranded on an
Italian beach. At least six sea turtle hatchlings captured around the
northwestern Hawaiian Islands in the 1970s tested positive for
tuberculosis. "Given these observations, the potential of acquiring a
mycobacterial infection from a sea turtle by direct contact or
consumption cannot be discounted," Aguirre's team says.
- Chlamydiaceae,
the same agents responsible for sexually transmitted chlamydia
infections in people. When contracted through nonsexual contact, such
as inhalation, the germs can cause pneumonialike diseases in mammals.
Aguirre and other scientists have found antibodies to these germs in
feces from sea turtles, indicating the animals' previous exposure to
the bacteria. The likely source of the turtles' exposure is infected
sea birds.
- Leptospires, corkscrew-shaped
bacteria. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
some people who become infected show no symptoms. Others develop high
fever, severe headache, chills, muscle aches, and vomiting. Jaundice,
red eyes, abdominal pain, diarrhea, and a rash may follow. Left
untreated, leptospirosis can cause kidney damage, meningitis
(inflammation of the membrane around the brain and spinal cord), liver
failure, respiratory distress, or death. The new review notes that
blood analyses and field observations indicate that sea turtles can
serve as a reservoir for the germs responsible for these outcomes.
Aguirre's own data from 2003 and 2004 showed that 80 percent of a
sample of green sea turtles in Baja California exhibited "high antibody
[concentrations] against 8 of 10 [types] of Leptospira interrogans."
- Parasites, including Entamoeba invadens, Cryptosporidium parvum,
and trematodes. Spirorchid trematodes, small flatworms, are a common
parasite in sea turtles, especially those with disfiguring tumors known
as fibropapillomas (see Sea Sickness).
Although trematodes live mostly in heart tissue, their eggs move
through the blood to the liver and have been found in the
fibropapillomas. Recently, spirorchid trematodes have also shown up in
human feces of Australian aboriginal children whose culture values sea
turtle meat.
Many people who have been
stricken by a turtle-transmitted microbe may develop food poisoning but
not realize the turtle connection. Sometimes, doctors or scientists
reviewing cases of infection may suspect turtle meat but are unable to
prove that it is the culprit because stool or blood samples from the
sick person were not inspected and their microbes compared to those in
local turtles. That was the case with Aguirre's mother, who 15 years
ago developed gastrointestinal illness after eating sea turtle meat. "I
think it was from Salmonella," he says, "but we weren't able to identify [the agent]." Because
babies and pregnant women are most likely to get sick from eating
tainted turtle meat, many cultures try to limit consumption of turtle
products—which are often ceremonial foods served on sacred or festive
days—to adult men and women who aren't pregnant. A June 2005 alert on ProMED,
an online service to track emerging diseases, noted a 2001 poisoning
outbreak in the Solomon Islands that reinforces the wisdom of such a
policy, if sea turtle meat is to be eaten at all. In that incident, "6
people (all children between 3 months - 11 years old) out of the 28
[affected] people died within 5 days" after eating sea turtle meat.
There was no doubt as to the source of the illnesses because people
became sick 4 to 6 hours after eating meat from a sick turtle and no
other protein. "Those who did not consume turtle meat did not
experience the symptoms," the ProMED editors reported. Poison reservoirs, not medicinesAguirre's
new report notes that because sea turtles can eat everything from
mollusks to seaweed, sponges, and fish, they accumulate many of the
pollutants present in their meals. These include potentially lethal
toxins from harmful algal blooms generically known as red tides (see Toxic Surfs).
In addition, turtle meat can carry dangerous doses of heavy metals,
such as cadmium and mercury, and organochlorine pollutants, such as
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and the pesticides chlordane,
dieldrin, and DDT. Toxic breakdown products of DDT as high as
1,200 parts per billion (ppb) have been found in sea turtles in the
Atlantic off the United States. Mediterranean sea turtles have been
shown to have concentrations of those toxic chemicals exceeding 700
ppb. The World Health Organization and the European Union have set
allowable concentrations of DDT and its breakdown products in food no
higher than 50 ppb. Ironically, Aguirre notes, sea turtle
products have been prescribed over the centuries as curatives. He knows
first hand. "My grandfather used to give us raw [sea turtle] blood with
lime for asthma and respiratory problems." he says, adding that he
would have to drink "half a glass" at a time despite its bad "metallic"
flavor. In many Latin American cultures, sea turtle eggs are
considered an aphrodisiac. Not only are there no data to support such a
claim, says Aguirre, but the eggs can have high concentrations of
pollutants that might actually impair fertility. One provocative
turtle-conservation campaign launched in Mexico last year acknowledged
the Viagralike reputation of sea turtle eggs. Aguirre says it featured
a Latin American model in a bikini saying that her boyfriend didn't
need sea turtle eggs to make her happy. That's one approach to
getting attention. It's not, however, one that Aguirre and his
colleagues favor. They're teaming up with two Mexican television
stations to produce public service announcements focusing on health
risks associated with turtle meat. In addition, Aguirre says, "we'll
have training workshops for local [public health] agencies" and help
them develop posters and brochures illustrating the types of parasites
and other health concerns associated with eating sea turtles. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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