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Nature
Buying Turtles for “Mercy Release”: How a Misguided Good Deed Is Fueling Illegal Wildlife Trade and Pushing Species Toward Extinction
For many people, releasing animals into nature as an act of compassion or spiritual merit is seen as a meaningful tradition associated with kindness, luck, and moral responsibility. Yet in Vietnam, the growing demand for turtles used in “phong sinh” (mercy release) is creating a dangerous unintended consequence: it is actively fueling illegal wildlife capture, trafficking, and ecological harm. What appears to be a benevolent act can, in reality, become part of a destructive commercial cycle that threatens native turtle populations, strengthens black-market trade, and increases the spread of invasive species.


According to recent campaigns by Education for Nature Vietnam (ENV), the illegal trade of terrestrial and freshwater turtles remains widespread, driven heavily by demand for religious release practices and ornamental pet ownership. ENV emphasizes a critical but often misunderstood reality: purchasing turtles—whether for compassion, ceremony, or private keeping—creates direct financial incentives for hunters, traffickers, and illegal sellers to capture more animals from the wild.

Survey findings reveal the scale of the problem. ENV documented 212 online accounts advertising approximately 50,000 turtles through nearly 15,000 sales posts across digital platforms. In Ho Chi Minh City alone, a public survey found that 9 percent of respondents had purchased turtles specifically for release, with many believing the act promoted both good fortune and wildlife protection. This misconception is especially harmful because each purchase reinforces market demand rather than reducing exploitation.

Religious and cultural spaces also play a role. Surveys of hundreds of temples and spiritual sites found turtles commonly released into ponds and lakes, demonstrating how traditional practices can unintentionally sustain wildlife trafficking when ecological consequences are poorly understood.

The conservation risks are severe. Vietnam’s native turtle populations are already under immense pressure from habitat loss, hunting, and trade. Increased capture for release or pet markets can accelerate population decline, pushing some species closer to extinction. Even more concerning is the rise of invasive foreign turtle species in trade, such as red-eared sliders and Indian star tortoises. These non-native species are increasingly sold in markets and online, and when released, they can establish breeding populations, disrupt ecosystems, outcompete native species, and introduce new ecological threats.

Experts warn that mercy release involving invasive turtles may actually damage local biodiversity rather than protect it. A well-intentioned act can therefore transform into both a conservation crisis and an invasive species problem.

This issue highlights a broader challenge: ethical intent alone does not guarantee positive environmental outcomes. Effective compassion must be informed by ecological understanding. True wildlife protection means reducing demand for captured animals, not purchasing them from exploitative supply chains.

ENV’s public awareness campaigns, including educational media and hotline reporting systems, aim to shift behavior from symbolic release toward more meaningful conservation action. Rather than buying turtles, citizens are encouraged to support habitat protection, report illegal wildlife sales, and avoid participating in markets that profit from exploitation.

Ultimately, protecting turtles requires rethinking how good intentions are practiced. Compassion should not create commerce for wildlife trafficking. In the case of turtle release, refusing to buy is often the most genuinely protective act.

By understanding the hidden consequences behind this practice, society can move from harmful misunderstanding toward informed conservation—ensuring that kindness helps preserve wildlife rather than unintentionally driving it closer to disappearance.
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