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Unsustainable harvest of water frogs in southern Turkey for the European market

  • Kerim Çiçek
  • , Dinçer Ayaz
  • , Murat Afsar
  • , Yusuf Bayrakcl
  • , Çiǧdem Akln Pekşen
  • , Oǧuzkan Cumhuriyet
  • , Ilhan Bayram Ismail
  • , Melodi Yenmiş
  • , Erdal Üstündaǧ
  • , Cemal Varol Tok
  • , C. Can Bilgin
  • , H. Reşit Akçakaya
  • Ege University
  • Manisa Celal Bayar University
  • Baskent University
  • Republic of Turkey Ministry of Food
  • Canakkale Onsekiz Mart University
  • Middle East Technical University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

Frogs have been harvested from the wild for the last 40 years in Turkey. We analysed the population dynamics of Anatolian water frogs (Pelophylax spp.) in the Seyhan and Ceyhan Deltas during 2013-2015. We marked a total of 13,811 individuals during 3 years, estimated population sizes, simulated the dynamics of a harvested population over 50 years, and collated frog harvest and export statistics from the region and for Turkey as a whole. Our capture estimates indicated a population reduction of c. 20% per year, and our population modelling showed that, if overharvesting continues at current rates, the harvested populations will decline rapidly. Simulations with a model of harvested population dynamics resulted in a risk of extinction of > 90% within 50 years, with extinction likely in c. 2032. Our interviews with harvesters revealed their economic dependence on the frog harvest. However, our results also showed that reducing harvest rates would not only ensure the viability of these frog populations but would also provide a source of income that is sustainable in the long term. Our study provides insights into the position of Turkey in the 'extinction domino' line, in which harvest pressure shifts among countries as frog populations are depleted and harvest bans are effected. We recommend that harvesting of wild frogs should be banned during the mating season, hunting and exporting of frogs < 30 g should be banned, and harvesters should be trained on species knowledge and awareness of regulations.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)364-372
Number of pages9
JournalORYX
Volume55
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2021

Keywords

  • Amphibian conservation
  • Anatolian water frog
  • Pelophylax
  • Turkey
  • extinction domino effect
  • frog harvest
  • sustainable use
  • wildlife trade

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