2019
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.7196
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Population demography of Oldham’s leaf turtle (Cyclemys oldhamii) in protected and disturbed habitats in Thailand

Abstract: Background Freshwater turtle populations are vulnerable to a range of human activities because of particular life history attributes, and anthropogenic impacts can cause shifts in demographic traits, including survival, density and population structure. Asian freshwater turtles have undergone dramatic population declines in recent decades principally because of collection for food, pet, and traditional medicine markets. Despite this, few studies have been conducted on the population demography o… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…However, the performance of population models for turtles and tortoises may be constrained by factors such as the use of survivorship estimates from different species or locations or a flawed determination of initial population size (King et al, 2021). And for many of the world's species and populations, appropriate demographic data are entirely lacking (e.g., Martins & Souza, 2009; Price et al, 2021; Seateun et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the performance of population models for turtles and tortoises may be constrained by factors such as the use of survivorship estimates from different species or locations or a flawed determination of initial population size (King et al, 2021). And for many of the world's species and populations, appropriate demographic data are entirely lacking (e.g., Martins & Souza, 2009; Price et al, 2021; Seateun et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unregulated commercial harvest and bycatch mortality can be an issue for several species, particularly for rare or threatened ones (Brown et al 2011; Lyons et al 2013; Pantoja-Lima et al 2014; Midwood et al 2015). Besides their use by local communities as food (Tuberville et al 2005; Pantoja-Lima et al 2014), freshwater turtles can be exploited for various reasons such as commercialization as pets, use in traditional medicine, and religious rituals (Alves and Santana 2008; Jensen and Das 2008; Alves et al 2009; Ferronato and Cruzado 2013; Lyons et al 2013; Seateun et al 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%