Annam Pond Turtle, Annamemys annamensis
(Siebenrock, 1903) Photo: © CITES
Management Authority of China
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Seeing the huge profits that the reptile – known as rua dong in Vietnamese – is fetching, many people in Phu My, Phu Cat, An Nhon, and Hoai Nhon districts have taken to it.
Tu and his wife, farmers in Phu Cat, went turtle hunting and did not have time to care for their 2,000-square metre cucumber field. As a result, the entire crop died, but after two months of hunting, the couple have yet to trap a single animal.
Dao, a turtle trader in Phu Cat, said she sold the animals she buys to an agent in the north who had been willing to buy even small rua dong weighing less than 200 grammes.
Local traders said the agents in the north in turn sold the turtles to China for medicinal and other purposes.
Rua dong, also called rua Trung bo, is an endemic species found only in some central Vietnamese provinces.
It has been listed in the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species since 2005.
Nguyen Huu Hao, deputy director of the province's Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, said few animals were caught.
Asked why the reptile had not been protected, he said: "It is hard to ensure effective prevention because people mostly go to catch [it] at night and do so stealthily."
Nguyen Hieu Hoa, head of the province's Forest Protection Sub-department, however, claimed: "We are taking measures to prevent [it] and protect the endangered turtle."