Register      Login
Wildlife Research Wildlife Research Society
Ecology, management and conservation in natural and modified habitats
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Freshwater turtles of the TransFly region of Papua New Guinea – notes on diversity, distribution, reproduction, harvest and trade

Arthur Georges A C , Fiorenzo Guarino A and Biatus Bito B
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Institute for Applied Ecology, University of Canberra, ACT 2616, Australia.

B World Wide Fund for Nature, TransFly Project, PO Box 199, Daru, Western Province, Papua New Guinea.

C Corresponding author. Email: georges@aerg.canberra.edu.au

Wildlife Research 33(5) 373-384 https://doi.org/10.1071/WR05087
Submitted: 29 September 2005  Accepted: 4 May 2006   Published: 14 August 2006

Abstract

The Chelidae is a family of side-necked turtles restricted in distribution to South America and Australasia. While their biology in Australia is reasonably well known, species in New Guinea are very poorly known despite high diversity, especially in the southern lowlands. In this paper, we report on the diversity, distribution, habitat and reproductive biology of the freshwater turtles of the TransFly region of the Western Province of Papua New Guinea, with special emphasis on reproduction of Emydura subglobosa, Elseya branderhorsti and Elseya novaeguineae. Seven species were captured, with reliable records of an eighth. A key to the freshwater turtles of the TransFly region is provided. Harvest methods, consumption, and trade in turtles by the TransFly communities are documented. There is mounting pressure to take advantage of revenue opportunities afforded by the Asian turtle trade, but this is impeded by lack of transport infrastructure. There is also insufficient demographic information on any New Guinean turtle species to make a reasoned judgment on the level of harvest that would be sustainable. Nor is there sufficient information on captive rearing for most species, and where it is available it is not accessible by local villagers. These knowledge gaps need to be addressed and factored into a management plan that is implemented before local communities can capitalise on the commercial opportunities provided by the turtle fauna without risking collapse of the resource and the implications for their concurrent subsistence economy that would follow.


Acknowledgments

We thank the many people who assisted us in the field, but especially Jerrimiah Naipu, Moimoa K. Bariga, William Bariga, Anthony Mayapa, Dugau Barriga, Gambi Moiu and Magen Simita for their exceptional efforts and companionship. We are grateful to the villages of Serki, Daraia and Keru for their warm and elaborate welcomes, and to all the villages we visited for their efforts in securing and holding turtles for us. The Papua New Guinea Department of Environment and Conservation assisted us in gaining permission to undertake this research. Our study would not have been possible without the contacts and exceptional goodwill established by the World Wide Fund for Nature in the areas we visited. We are indebted to Moimoa K. Bariga, chair of the Suki/Aramba Wildlife Management Committee and committee members for securing us access to land. Naipu Trading Pty Ltd and Fesua Trading Ltd provided us with boats and vehicles. Garrick Hitchcock provided advice on correct spelling of language names.


References

Armstrong, G. , and Booth, D. T. (2005). Dietary ecology of the Australian freshwater turtle (Elseya sp.: Chelonia: Chelidae) in the Burnett River, Queensland. Wildlife Research 32, 349–353.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Ayres M. C. (1983). This side, that side: locality and exogamous group definition in Morehead and southwestern Papua. Ph.D. Thesis, University of Chicago, Illinois.

Booth, D. T. (2002). The breaking of diapause in embryonic broad-shell river turtles (Chelodina expansa). Journal of Herpetology 36, 304–307.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Bowe M. (1997). Turning a threat into an asset: an income generating scheme for community development and exotic species control in Wasur National Park, Irian Jaya, Indonesia. In ‘Community Participation in Wetland Management: Lessons from the Field Proceedings of Workshop 3: Wetlands, Local People and Development, International Conference on Wetlands and Development, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 9–13 October 1995’. (Eds G. Claridge and B. O’Callaghan.) (Wetlands International: Wageningen, The Netherlands.)

Cann, J. , and Legler, J. (1994). The Mary River tortoise: a new genus and species of short-necked chelid from Queensland, Australia (Testudines: Pleurodira). Chelonian Conservation and Biology 1, 81–96.
Cogger H. G. (2000). ‘Reptiles and Amphibians of Australia.’ (Reed New Holland: Sydney.)

Doody, J. S. , Georges, A. , and Young, J. E. (2004). Determinants of reproductive success and offspring sex in a turtle with environmental sex determination. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, London 81, 1–16.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Georges A., and Thomson S. (in press). Evolution and zoogeography of the Australian freshwater turtles. In ‘Evolution and Zoogeography of Australasian Vertebrates’. (Eds J. R. Merrick, M. Archer, G. Hickey and M. Lee.) (AUSCIPUB (Australian Scientific Publishing) Pty Ltd: Sydney.)

Georges, A. , Adams, M. , and McCord, W. (2002). Electrophoretic delineation of species boundaries within the genus Chelodina (Testudines: Chelidae) of Australia, New Guinea and Indonesia. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 134, 401–421.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | Goode J. (1967). ‘Freshwater Tortoises of Australia and New Guinea (in the Family Chelidae).’ (Lansdowne Press: Melbourne.)

Gordon R. G. J. (Ed.) (2005). ‘Ethnologue: Languages of the World.’ (SIL International: Dallas, TX.)

Gordos, M. A. , Franklin, C. E. , and Limpus, C. J. (2004). Effect of water depth and water velocity upon the surfacing frequency of the bimodally respiring freshwater turtle, Rheodytes leukops. Journal of Experimental Biology 207, 3099–3107.
Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar | PubMed | Iskandar D. T. (2000). ‘Turtles and Crocodiles of Insular Southeast Asia and New Guinea.’ (Institute of Technology: Bandung, Indonesia.)

Iverson J. (1992). ‘A Revised Checklist with Distribution Maps of the Turtles of the World.’ (Privately printed, J. P. Iverson, Department of Biology, Earlham College, Richmond, IN 47374 USA.)

Jenkins M. D. (1995). ‘Tortoises and Freshwater Turtles: The Trade in Southeast Asia.’ (TRAFFIC International: UK)

Judge D. (2001). The ecology of the polytypic freshwater turtle species Emydura macquarii macquarii. M.Sc. Thesis, University of Canberra.

Kennett, R. , and Christian, K. (1994). Metabolic depression in estivating long-necked turtles (Chelodina rugosa). Physiological Zoology 67, 1087–1102.
Legler J. M. (1985). Australian chelid turtles: reproductive patterns in wide-ranging taxa. In ‘Biology of Australasian Frogs and Reptiles’. (Eds G. Grigg, R. Shine and H. Ehmann.) pp. 117–123. (Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales: Sydney.)

Legler, J. M. , and Cann, J. (1980). A new genus and species of chelid turtle from Queensland, Australia. Contributions to Science 324, 1–18.[Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County]
Pritchard P. C. H. (1979). ‘Encyclopedia of Turtles.’ (TFH Publications: Neptune City, NJ.)

Rhodin, A. G. J. (1993). Range extension for Emydura subglobosa in Papua New Guinea. Chelonian Conservation and Biology 1, 47.
Rose M., Parker F., and Rhodin A. G. J. (1982). New Guinea plateless turtle or pitted shell turtle (Fly River or pig-nose turtle), Carettochelys insculpta Ramsay 1886. In ‘The IUCN Amphibia–Reptilia Red Data Book, Part 1. Testudines, Crocodylia, Rhyncocephalia’. (Ed. B. Groombridage.) pp. 243–246. (International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources: Gland, Switzerland.)

Samedi, , and Iskandar, D. T. (2000). Freshwater turtle and tortoise conservation and utilization in Indonesia. Chelonian Research Monographs 2, 106–111.
Wurm S. A., and Hattori S. (1981). ‘Language Atlas of the Pacific Area.’ Pacific Linguistics Series C, No. 66. (Australian Academy of the Humanities and the Japanese Academy: Canberra.)