Cambodian Royal Turtle nearly extinct

April 27, 2016 12:00 am | Updated 02:03 am IST - PHNOM PENH, Cambodia

: Cambodia’s Royal Turtle is nearly extinct, with fewer than 10 left in the wild, because increased sand dredging and illegal clearance of flooded forest have shrunk its habitat, a conservationist group warned Monday.

The New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society said in a statement that for several years the small remaining population of Royal Turtles, “perhaps numbering fewer than 10,’ have been successfully protected in the Sre Ambel river system by a joint project of the government’s Fishery Administration and WCS.

But a recent increase in disturbance along the river system in Koh Khang province, the only place the turtle is still found in Cambodia, is putting the species at great risk, it said. The Royal Turtle was believed extinct in Cambodia until 2000 when a small population was re-discovered.AP

The Royal Turtle is one of the world’s 25 most endangered tortoises and freshwater turtles. Also known as the Southern River terrapin, the Royal Turtle is so named because in historical times only the royal family could consume its eggs. The species was designated as Cambodia’s national reptile in 2005.

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