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Kansas lawmakers didn’t protect ornate box turtles from poaching, but KDWP regulators will

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After Kansas lawmakers failed to pass heightened protections for ornate box turtles, government regulators have taken action to protect the state reptile from poachers who would have them “exported into extinction.”

The Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks Commission voted unanimously Thursday to approve the new regulations on possession limits for amphibians and reptiles.

“We wanted to basically develop some possession limits that would reduce take from the wild, make it a little easier for law enforcement during stops,” said Daren Riedle, a KDWP wildlife diversity coordinator, “but still provide educational opportunities for kids, for all of us, that grew up keeping a box turtle or a lizard or something, you know, still provide those educational opportunities, which are beneficial for those that grow up enjoying the outdoors.”

The old rules in KAR-115-20-2 allowed anyone to keep up to five individuals of any species of amphibian or reptile that is not threatened or endangered. The new rules imposes a maximum of five total amphibians per domicile and up to five reptiles with no more than two of any species per domicile.

House Bill 2479, which failed to pass the Legislature in 2022 but was part of the impetus behind pursuing regulatory change, would have banned anyone from capturing or possessing an ornate box turtle.

Riedle said a consensus was found after working through several drafts between ecological services, law enforcement and non-governmental organizations that provided environmental, conservation and agricultural input.

Preventing box turtles from being ‘exported into extinction’

Dan Riley, chief counsel at KDWP, told the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules and Regulations on July 10 that the regulation is a response to painted box turtles becoming the victims of an overseas pet industry.

“The intent was to limit the illegal trade so that box turtles aren’t basically exported into extinction by the pet trade, but still leave enough latitude in the language so that little kids that go to summer events could still have a turtle race,” Riley said. “We didn’t want to make it so that that the regulation became too heavy handed or create additional problems rather than dealing with the turtle export problem that it was intended to address.”

Rep. Bill Sutton, R-Gardner, said he had no issue with the regulation, but questioned whether it would solve the problem.

“It seems like this is a really tough one to enforce,” he said. “Just my way of thinking, it would be easier to stop it at the export step, rather than trying to police possession of turtles. That just seems really, really difficult to me.”

Riley said he did not have a good answer, though he believes the regulation “will have an impact.” Having a regulatory standard, along with education and public awareness, will help, he said. He also noted that export regulations are handled at the federal level.

“If somebody makes it their purpose and their mission to covertly ship painted box turtles out of Kansas, that’s going to become a bigger enforcement issue, obviously, but we’ve got an enforcement mechanism if it’s necessary,” he said. “So hopefully public awareness and just getting the word out that it’s detrimental to the species, it’s prohibited, don’t pick up turtles and then try to sell them to someone as a pet. So hopefully we’ll get a lot of benefit from that. And if we do need to do something further, then we’ll go back to the drawing board at that point.”

More:Poaching threatens the ornate box turtle, Kansas’ state reptile. Lawmakers are trying to help

Legislature failed to pass turtle protections backed by Topekans

KDWP Secretary Brad Loveless told lawmakers in a February 2022 hearing that he supported HB 2479 because the agency was concerned about population declines for the species. He acknowledged that regulations could be an alternate route of accomplishing the same goal.

The bill, which was introduced by 11 Democrats led by former Topeka Rep. Jim Gartner, never made it out of the House Agriculture Committee in the Republican-controlled Legislature.

Washburn University biology professor Benjamin Reed, who has studied the ornate box turtle for the past decade, told lawmakers at that hearing that poachers — who sometimes target research areas — are to blame for population declines.

Reed said turtles are important seed and spore dispersers, they prevent disease spread by eating carrion and they are important for pest and weed control, among other ecological roles. For ranchers, turtles are important for breaking down cow patties.

Topeka Zoo conservation and education director Dennis Dinwiddie said the species population has “experienced an alarming reduction.”

“Because box turtles have unique and colorful markings, they are collected from the wild and sold overseas through the illegal pet trade,” Dinwiddie testified. “We feel that poaching these turtles from the wild to send overseas has become the greatest threat they face. We feel it is the primary cause for their significant losses from the wild.”

As reported in the Topeka Capital Journal.

Stealing from grandkids piggy bank

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andre-taissin

By Trent Loos
Guest Columnist

Every time you turn around people and organizations are spending money like crazy because, “they got a grant.” While some grants from nonprofits and foundations truly go to help where help is most needed and are generated by donations and fundraising efforts. My problem is with federal grants.
I can’t believe that people think taking every federal dollar you can get your hands on is a good idea. It is not free money.   It is our taxes, which just keep going up.
Meanwhile, since the federal government is already spending more than they take in, they are actually borrowing money to give out these “free” grants.
As of noon on Labor Day 2023, our United States National Debt was $32,834,887,240,906. Do you even know how much that is? It is nearly $33 trillion dollars and that amounts to $97,857 per citizen, which is a figure I think we can all get a better grasp of.  The U.S. debt that is held by foreign countries is over $7 trillion. What happens when these foreign countries want their money?
From solar farms to schools taking Emergency and Secondary School Emergency Relief Funds to carbon pipelines and wind turbines, nobody really wins except those with a finger in the kitty. The people getting stuck with the bill for this “free money” are your grandkids, your great-grandkids and many more generations to come. These governmental get-rich-schemes are benefiting foreign-owned wind turbine and solar companies that promise riches, in my opinion, and landowners still pay the taxes and take the pittance they are given.
If you think we aren’t giving away the inheritance of our offspring, then take a look at the amount of money being doled out in just a handful of these programs:
Subsidies from the government to Summit and Navigator carbon pipeline owners alone will be over $8 billion and the subsidy to the affiliated ethanol plants will be $7 billion.
ESSER funds taken from our grandkids and “given” to schools that now have their hands tied on how they can use the money will add up to $190 billion. Do some digging into the requirements for accepting these grants and you will be alarmed.
Billions of dollars are going into the pockets of wind and solar energy developers who are also gobbling up land to construct their “power supplies.” Even electric companies are getting money to support these projects.
While many consumers complain about subsidies to agriculture, which I personally do not approve of, those actually amount to less than 1% of the federal budget. Of the $198 billion U.S. Department of Agriculture budget, only $30 billion goes to farm payments while the balance provides Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program aid and food services to low-income households.
The bottom line is this, stop taking the “free” government money from your grandkids. It doesn’t matter “if you don’t take it then someone else will,” let them. Stop thinking federal grants are “free money.” Our country wasn’t built on people getting something for nothing. If a new project or program needs a subsidy to keep standing, then it can’t stand on its own.
Trent Loos is a sixth generation United States farmer, host of the daily radio show, Loos Tales, and founder of Faces of Agriculture, a non-profit organization putting the human element back into the production of food. Get more information at www.LoosTales.com, or email Trent at [email protected].

Don’t get scammed!

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A K-State expert cautions consumers against scams

Scammers, it often seems, never rest.

Whether it be by phone, email or suspicious website, consumers face an onslaught of characters aiming to cash in on an easy buck, or even steal an identity.

But Kansas State University family finance specialist Elizabeth Kiss says knowing the tangles that scammers often use will help consumers stay safe.

“The Federal Trade Commission has a lot of great information for consumers about fraud and they highlight signs for things that might be a scam,” Kiss said.

Some of the common signs consumers should look for include:

The scammer pretends to be from an organization you might know.

Some examples include the Social Security Administration, the IRS or Medicare. Or, Kiss notes, the caller may represent themselves as being from a utility company or charity. “They have used technology to change their phone numbers,” Kiss said, “so it looks like what you’re seeing (on your phone).”

The scammer indicates there is a problem that needs your attention.

You might be told that you owe money or someone in your family had an emergency and need your assistance immediately. On a computer, you may get an urgent message about a virus infecting your files. Another form of scam indicates that you’ve won a prize and you must act immediately to claim it.

The scammer pressures you to act immediately.

Scammers don’t want you to have time to think; they want to get your attention now. There is an urgency to the claims the person is making, whether it’s by phone or computer.

As reported in the High Plains Journal.

Elm Leaf Beetle

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Description: Young larvae are dark-colored, hairy grubs. Older larvae are yellow with two long, dark stripes. Adult beetles have green and yellow stripes and are about 1/3-inch long.
Life Cycle: There are typically two generations of elm leaf beetles each year. They overwinter as adults and emerge from their protective shelters in early spring. As elm trees develop leaves the beetles move in and females begin laying eggs. Larvae hatch and spread throughout the tree to feed. Larvae reach maturity within four weeks and seek shelter to pupate. They may drop to the base of the tree or crawl within cracks of the bark to pupate. Adults emerge in about two weeks and relocate to the leaves to eat and mate giving rise to the second generation of larvae. This generation of adult beetles will wait to lay eggs until the spring.
Damage: Larvae cause most of the damage by skeletonizing leaves of elm trees, giving
preference to Siberian (Chinese) elms. Adult beetles chew holes through the leaves. Leaves that have been heavily damaged may turn brown and drop.
Control: For healthy trees, at this point in the season, elm leaf beetles and larvae tend not to cause significant damage so spraying is not recommended. If the larvae are active, they can be controlled with several insecticides. If they have already dropped to pupate spraying will be ineffective.
Larvae and adult sprays include: acephate (Acephate, Orthene), spinosad (Natural Guard
Spinosad, Conserve, Captain Jack’s Dead Bug Brew, Monterey Garden Insect Spray), lambda cyhalothrin (Scimitar, Spectracide Triazicide).
Cynthia Domenghini, Extension Agent