Phuket Turtle Poisoning: Three Villagers Die
THREE people have died in a Phuket sea gypsy village from what experts believe is food poisoning from the meat of a Hawksbill turtle.
A sea gypsy woman died on June 4, followed on June 9 by an 11-month-old boy who fed from the breast of a woman who ate the turtle, and a 60-year-old woman who died on June 11.
All were from the southern sea gypsy village of Rawai.
Others who ate the meat suffered food poisoning, but survived. About 80 people told investigators that they shared the turtle.
Dr Wannakiat Tubtimsang, Director of the Department of Marine and Coastal Resources, based at Cape Panwa, said he first learned of the deaths on June 10 when villagers came to the cape, which shares space with the Phuket Marine Biology Centre. Turtles are hatched and raised there, and injured turtles are helped to recover.
The villagers asked Dr Wannakiat for a live turtle to release. They believed that by freeing the turtle, their good fortune would be restored.
An investigation by the Public Health Department and Dr Wannakiat established that the victims had eaten the flesh of a Hawksbill turtle, a rare type that has unusual eating habits. Hawksbills eat sea sponges containing high concentrations of silica, as well as comb jellies and jellyfish.
''It appears the turtle was toxic,'' Dr Wannakiat said. ''We haven't had a case like it on Phuket before.''
Today at a seminar entitled 'Marine Biodiversity in Thailand: Challenges and Opportunities' at Phuket Royal City Hotel, Dr Wannakiat mentioned the case.
He said that the sea gypsies had been warned that some species of traditional fare could be dangerous because of changes in the feeding habits of marine creatures.
Dr Wannakiat gave the Rawai villagers a turtle to free. The villagers say they are not going to eat Hawksbill turtles in future.
The Hawksbill, named for its curved beak, is perhaps the rarest of five species that were once found in abundance off the coast of Phuket and the Andaman.
Phuket Wan
