Kalyar Platt | |
---|---|
Born | 1972 (age 50–51) |
Education | Yangon University (BSc, MSc) Chulalongkorn University (PhD) |
Awards | Behler Turtle Conservation Award (2015) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Herpetology |
Institutions | Wildlife Conservation Society |
Kalyar Platt is a Burmese herpetologist and turtle conservationist. She is the director of the Myanmar Program of the Turtle Survival Alliance and oversees conservation, breeding and reintroduction projects for some of Southeast Asia's rarest turtle species. She formerly worked for Wildlife Conservation Society and earned her PhD from Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University in 2007.
Kalyar was born in 1972 in Yangon, Myanmar, to U Nyunt Thein and Daw San San. Her father was a government engineer involved in the construction of hydroelectric dams. She accompanied him to work sites where she witnessed construction workers collecting turtles in pits. She was fascinated by the variety of species but recoiled in horror when the turtles were pulled from the pit, butchered and cooked by the camp chef. [1]
She earned her B.Sc. with honours from Yangon University in 1995. She earned her M.Sc. from the same university in 2000. [2] Fearing that the Burmese military junta would close the universities, she moved to Bangkok in 2001. [1] Platt earned her PhD in 2007 from Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok. [2] She studied the ecology of the Southern river terrapin (Batagur affinis) under the biologist Kumthorn Thirakhupt. She then moved to the United States with her husband and lived briefly in Alpine, Texas before moving to New York. She lived with her sisters and worked at an orchid farm. [1]
Platt started her conservation career at the Wildlife Conservation Society in Thailand in 2001. [2] [3] She said that her decision to work in wildlife conservation was influenced by the career of primatologist Jane Goodall. [4]
Platt led a study in the Tanintharyi Region of Myanmar in 2008 concerning local beliefs towards the critically endangered Northern river terrapin (Batagur baska) and found that the people had "strong, highly localised beliefs that these animals have spiritual powers, including the ability to transform into humans." The study found a hesitation to disturb or harvest the turtles due to the belief that they are under the protection of spirits known as nats. [5]
In 2009, she was part of a team of scientists that, after nearly a decade of searching, rediscovered a population of wild specimens of the critically endangered Arakan forest turtle (Heosemys depressa) in the Rakhine Yoma Elephant Range in the Arakan Mountains of Myanmar. [6] Efforts to conserve the Arakan forest turtle have been limited due to instability in the region. According to Platt, "Although we have been educating the public about the Arakan tortoise, we are not able to carry out conservation and education activities as before due to political instability". [7]
In 2010, Platt was hired to be the Director of the Myanmar Program of the Turtle Survival Alliance. [1] Platt oversees conservation, breeding and reintroduction projects for some of Southeast Asia's rarest turtle species. One of her earliest conservation efforts involved organising a national conservation workshop for the Burmese star tortoise (Geochelone platynota) and developing a plan detailing how and where to reintroduce the species. [1] She re-engineered the conservation program for the tortoise, [2] establishing a captive breeding program [8] at Minsontaung Wildlife Sanctuary and releasing 1000 of the turtles into the wild from 2013 to 2017. [9] Following the success of the program at the Minsontaung Wildlife Sanctuary, reintroduction programs for the tortoises were created at the Shwesettaw Wildlife Sanctuary and Lawkananda Wildlife Sanctuary. By 2018, the population of Burmese star tortoises in forest reserves had increased to 15,000. [10]
Platt oversaw the collection of Burmese roofed turtle (Batagur trivittata) eggs at the Chindwin River. In 2015, she conducted a release of hatchlings that had been captively reared from eggs collected from wild turtles. She also established a third assurance colony for the turtles and worked with the Yadanabon Zoological Gardens in Mandalay to increase their production of hatchlings. [2] [11]
In late 2015, Platt travelled to Lanbi Kyun to establish the island's first turtle hatchery, train staff in hatchery management, and reassess the suitability of the island's beaches for sea turtle nests. [12]
Platt received the Behler Turtle Conservation Award in 2015. [13] The Assistant Director General of the Myanmar Forest Department remarked that the "TSA/WCS efforts on behalf of turtles is without exception the most effective conservation program in the country, and much of this success was due to the unceasing labors of one person, the Leik Saya Magyi, Indomitable Turtle Lady, of Myanmar, Kalyar Platt." [1]
Platt has received grants from the National Geographic Society for her work in turtle conservation. In 2017, she received a grant for the reintroduction and conservation of the Burmese star tortoise. In 2021, she received a grant for the repatriation of confiscated big-headed turtles (Platysternon megacephalum) to protected areas. [2]
During a presentation on World Turtle Day in 2019, Platt made an argument against releasing turtles at pagoda ponds and pleaded for people to stop the practice. [lower-alpha 1] [15]
Platt married fellow herpetologist Steven Platt in 2004. [1]
Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge is a wildlife refuge in New York City managed by the National Park Service as part of Gateway National Recreation Area. It is composed of the open water and intertidal salt marshes of Jamaica Bay. It lies entirely within the boundaries of New York City, divided between the boroughs of Brooklyn to the west and Queens to the east.
The Bolson tortoise, also called the Mexican giant tortoise or yellow-margined tortoise, is a species of tortoise from North America. Of the six North American tortoise species, it is the largest, having a carapace length of about 46 cm (18 in). It lives in a region of the Chihuahuan Desert known as the Bolsón de Mapimí, which is located in north-central Mexico.
The Arakan forest turtle is a critically endangered turtle species native to the Arakan Hills in western Myanmar and the bordering Chittagong Hill Tracts in Bangladesh. The Arakan forest turtle is a semiterrestrial turtle, meaning it can survive in aquatic as well as terrestrial habitats, but adults prefer living in terrestrial habitats.
Heosemys is a genus of freshwater turtles in the family Geoemydidae. The genus Heosemys was split out of the related genus Geoemyda by McDowell in 1964.
The giant Asian pond turtle inhabits rivers, streams, marshes, and rice paddies from estuarine lowlands to moderate altitudes throughout Cambodia and Vietnam and in parts of Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar and Thailand.
The northern river terrapin is a species of riverine turtle native to Southeast Asia. It is classified Critically Endangered by the IUCN and considered extinct in much of its former range.
The impressed tortoise occurs in mountainous forest areas in Southeast Asia, mainly in Myanmar Burma, southern China, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia and Northeast India. The species has a golden brown shell and skin. Adults are much smaller than their relatives the Asian forest tortoise, with a maximum carapace length of 35 cm (14 in).
The Malayan softshell turtle is a species of softshell turtle in the family Trionychidae. It is monotypic in its genus.
The painted terrapin, painted batagur, or saw-jawed turtle is a species of turtles in the family Geoemydidae. It was formerly in its own genus, Callagur, but has been reclassified to the genus, Batagur.
The variable mud turtle, also known as Rhodesian mud turtle, Mashona hinged terrapin or variable hinged terrapin, is a species of turtle in the family Pelomedusidae. It is widely distributed in Central, East, and Southern Africa. The species was officially described by John Hewitt in 1927 and had to be broken into subspecies due to color variations on the heads of the turtles acrost the regions.
Siebenrockiella crassicollis is a freshwater turtle endemic to Southeast Asia. It is one of two species classified under the genus Siebenrockiella in the family Geoemydidae.
Terrapins are one of several small species of turtle living in fresh or brackish water. Terrapins do not form a taxonomic unit and may not be closely related. Many belong to the families Geoemydidae and Emydidae.
Dr. Chan Eng Heng, a retired professor from Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, is a turtle conservationist who has been recognised by the United Nations Environment Program for her efforts to protect sea turtles.
Rakhine Yoma Elephant Range is a protected area in Myanmar's Rakhine Yoma mountains, covering about 1,756 km2 (678 sq mi) of evergreen and mixed deciduous forest at an elevation of 20–1,270 m (66–4,167 ft).
Batagur is a genus of large turtles from South and Southeast Asia. All members of the genus are seriously threatened. With a recent merger with members from two other genera, this genus has six described species.
The southern river terrapin is a turtle of the family Geoemydidae found in Malaysia, Indonesia and Cambodia.
Minsontaung Wildlife Sanctuary is a protected area in Myanmar, covering 22.56 km2 (8.71 sq mi). It was established in 2001. It ranges in elevation from 195 to 375 m in the Natogyi Township, Mandalay Region.
The Turtle Conservancy (TC) is a 501(c)3 organization with a focus on protecting threatened turtles and tortoises and their habitats worldwide working toward improving turtle and tortoise populations in the wild. The TC is a conservation organization protecting tortoises and freshwater turtles with work in five areas: species conservation, protection of wild lands, research science, global awareness and education, and illegal trade prevention.
Centrochelys is a genus of tortoise. It contains one extant species and several extinct species:
The pond is small and the number of turtles is huge. People capture the turtles which are living freely in their natural environment and sell them to pilgrims to release into the ponds for good merit. How would one feel if they were forced to live in such cramped conditions?