Pig-nosed turtle (Carettochelys insculpta) Case Study
Home > Biodiversity Nature & People > Conservation Philanthropy > Grants > MBZF Grant 172517172
Continent: Oceania
Country: Papua New Guinea
Grant Amount: $8,500
Awarded Date: February 12, 2018
Population structure, wildlife forensics and conservation of the pig-nosed turtle (Carettochelys insculpta) in New Guinea
The pig-nosed turtle (Carettochelys insculpta) is frequently harvested by subsistence communities and trafficked through Asia. This research project is developing genetic wildlife forensic techniques to help combat the illegal trade and providing sustainability and environmental education to remote communities in New Guinea that harvest the turtles.
In partnership with Yolarnie Amepou of the Piku Biodiversity Network Inc. (PBN) NGO, University of Canberra Ph.D. Candidate Matthew Young will conduct research on the pig-nosed turtle (Carettochelys insculpta) and provide conservation and environmental education to local communities across the Gulf Province, Papua New Guinea. The team will be collecting DNA samples from pig-nosed turtles to assess population structure and variation in the species, as well as providing education material developed by the PBN conservation program focused in the Kikori region, to local schools throughout Gulf Province. The genetic research will inform the PBN already acting in the Kikori region of the scale of conservation action required to safeguard the turtles in the Kikori.
Wildlife trafficking for the illegal pet trade and traditional medicines is a concerning threat for the persistence of wild populations of pig-nosed turtles, especially those in Papua Province. The genetic research will also involve developing wildlife forensics resources for the assignment of provenance of trafficked individuals to their source populations, to combat the illegal trade and to aid conservation work repatriating seized pig-nosed turtles.
Funding from the Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund is enabling the team to conduct on-ground conservation fieldwork in Papua New Guinea and collect genetic samples for conservation research in 2018.
Grant documents
- Giving school students at Kapuna hospital children's education books about invasive species, pollution and sustainability.
- Photo of students holding children's education books on environmental issues such as sustainability, pollution and invasive species.
- Matt Young and local landholder field assistants collecting genetic samples from nesting Carettochelys insculpta.
- Matt Young and local landholder assistants waiting for female Carettochelys to finish nesting to start genetic sampling process.
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