Twelve years ago, one non-profit organization began working on a project to rehabilitate the population of a critically endangered animal in Belize. Today, the Belize Foundation for Research and Environmental Education, BFREE, is leading the charge across the region to prevent the Central American River Turtle or hicatee from going extinct. Culturally, hicatees are hunted by Belizeans for their meat. But studies have shown that overhunting has pushed the species to the brink of extinction. BFREE has established the only hicatee captive breeding facility in the region, and it has proven to be a huge success. News Five’s Paul Lopez travelled south to Toledo District to find out more about their work. He filed the following report.
Did you know that it is illegal to buy or sell the Central American river turtle or hicatees in Belize? Also, a single person can have up to three hicatees, and any female caught must be between fifteen to seventeen inches in size. Hunting this much-sought-after species can only be done outside of the monthlong closed season in May. Hicatees have only been found in three countries, Mexico, Belize and Guatemala. In Belize, it is a traditional delicacy that is highly sought after, especially in rural communities.
Yamira Novelo Fuentes, WCS
“Belize is really the only country out of the three that allows legal hunting and consumption of the species. It is critically endangered and that is some of the things people don’t understand or think about when they are doing their hunting practice or consumption.”
Jacob Marlin, Executive Director, BFREE
“We documented quite a lot and saw this was a completely pristine tropical rainforest that had been completely unexplored and unstudied.”
Thomas Pop, Manager, Hicatee Conservation Research Center
“These turtles are very difficult to work with and as you can see here, we don’t have a natural habitat for them but I am trying to make this pond their natural habitat so these turtles can feel comfortable in this area.”
“Hicatee is very secretive. They spend all their time underwater. They don’t come up on the beaches to lay eggs. They don’t come up to bask. It is a fully aquatic specie, more like a fish and they are very hard to study in the wild.”
The International Union for Conservation of Nature placed hicatees on its red list as critically endangered or facing an extremely high risk of extinction. Studies have shown that the turtle has been virtually eliminated from much of its habitat in southern Mexico. Its status in Guatemala remains unclear and several studies in Belize have shown that the numbers have significantly decreased over the years. These are the only three countries where hicatees can be found. BFREE is on a mission, through its research project, to breed and rewild hicatees in Belize.
Barney Hall, Wildlife Fellow, BFREE
“We target areas where the species once was, and we try to augment those populations by reintroducing these hicatees back into the wild. But before that we need to have veterinarians come in. They have to test blood, parasites, feces, we don’t want any introduced pathogens back into the wild.”
Barney Hall
“We have teams like the Savannah Field Station, they are constantly outfield, setting nets, trying to get a population assessment and they have been recapturing some of our turtles and we are seeing that they have been doing very good in the wild. So that is a very good sign.”
Yamira Novelo Fuentes
“I think when it comes to legislation and updating and amendment, I think you do need to take into consideration the community and what they want. Because we can put enforcement and legislation, but if you don’t have that community buy-in and that community who wants to be part of it then you wont be able to have compliance. And you want your communities to be stewards of their resources more than anything else.”
“One of the material we have and we like to use is this one, which just says take the hicatee promise, it is essentially saying I promise to be a hicatee hero and care about the species. I would say like there is, I do think there is hope and I do think the children are buying into this idea that our wildlife in Belize, it is critical to protect it and it is for us, all of us to take a little action whatever it is.”
Reporting for News Five, I am Paul Lopez.