Abstract

The Southeast Asian box turtle (Cuora amboinensis) is numerically the most important turtle exported from Indonesia. Listed as Vulnerable by the IUCN, this turtle is heavily harvested and exported for food and traditional medicine in China and for the pet trade primarily in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Despite its significance in global markets, relatively little is known about the species’ ecology or importance to ecosystems. We conducted our research in a national park in Sulawesi, Indonesia, and our objectives were to quantify trophic breadth, capacity for seed dispersal between aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, and whether ingestion of seeds by C. amboinensis enhances germination. We obtained diet samples from 200 individual turtles and found that the species is omnivorous, exhibiting an ontogenetic shift from more carnivorous to more omnivorous. Both subadults and adults scavenged on other vertebrates. In a seed passage experiment, turtles passed seeds for 2‒9 days after ingestion. Radio‐tracked turtles moved, on average, about 35 m per day, indicating that seeds from ingested fruits, given seed passage durations, could be dispersed 70‒313 m from the parent tree and potentially between wetland and upland ecosystems. In a seed germination experiment, we found that ingestion of seeds by turtles enhanced germination, as compared with control seeds, for four of six plant species tested. Of these, two are common in the national park, making up a significant proportion of plant biomass in lowland swamp forest and around ephemeral pools in savanna, and are highly valued outside of the park for their lumber for construction of houses, furniture, and boats. Protection of C. amboinensis populations may be important for maintaining trophic linkages that benefit biodiversity, communities, and local economies.

Highlights

  • Indonesia is a hotspot for turtle diversity (Buhlmann et al, 2009), with 25 native species of non-marine turtles

  • 80% of Indonesia's non-marine turtles are classified as Vulnerable, Endangered, or Critically Endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN, 2020), and for most, legal and illegal harvesting (Schoppe, 2009) and habitat loss associated with human population growth and a rapidly developing economy (Williams, 2013) threaten populations

  • We conducted this research from December 2017 to April 2018 as part of a broader project evaluating populations, movements, and ecological roles of C. amboinensis in and around Rawa Aopa Watomohai National Park in the province of South East Sulawesi, Sulawesi, Indonesia

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Indonesia is a hotspot for turtle diversity (Buhlmann et al, 2009), with 25 native species of non-marine turtles. Turtle populations continue to decline throughout Southeast Asia, including Indonesia; yet, we have limited understanding of their biology, especially ecology. To date, limited research has examined the contributions that freshwater turtles make to cross-ecosystem resource flows, but the large quantities of plant and animal biomass consumed by some turtles (Coe, Bourn, & Swingland, 1979; Spencer, Thompson, & Hume, 1998), coupled with relatively large home ranges (Arvisais et al, 2002; Fachín-Terán, Vogt, & Thorbjarnarson, 2006) and frequent movements between aquatic and terrestrial habitats (Arvisais et al, 2002; Semlitsch & Bodie, 2003), indicate that comparable relationships may exist. The objectives of our study were to identify the ecological roles of one of the world's most heavily traded turtles by: (a) characterizing trophic breadth of C. amboinensis through ontogeny, (b) determining capacity for seed dispersal, and (3) quantifying contributions of this turtle to seed germination

| METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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