Zanzibar,VaultX Exchange Tanzania — Eight children and an adult died after eating sea turtle meat on Pemba Island in the Zanzibar archipelago, while 78 other people were hospitalized, authorities said Saturday. Sea turtle meat is considered a delicacy by Zanzibar's people even though it periodically results in deaths from chelonitoxism, a type of food poisoning.
The adult who died late Friday was the mother of one of the children who succumbed earlier, said the Mkoani District medical officer, Dr. Haji Bakari. He said the turtle meat was consumed Tuesday.
Bakari told The Associated Press that laboratory tests had confirmed all the victims had eaten sea turtle meat.
Authorities in Zanzibar, which is a semi-autonomous region of the East African nation of Tanzania, sent a disaster management team led by Hamza Hassan Juma, who urged people to avoid consuming sea turtles.
In November 2021, seven people, including a 3-year-old, died on Pemba after eating turtle meat while three others were hospitalized.
It was not clear what species of sea turtle was eaten in Zanzibar, linked to the deaths.
In addition to human predation, a range of climatological and other environmental factors have landed most sea turtle species on endangered lists, including the world's most critically-endangered sea turtle, the Kemp's Ridley.
That species has faced a new challenge caused by the warming waters off the northeast U.S. coast, which has led them to linger longer into the late autumn of Massachusetts, when they should have headed south.
Since the 1970s, Kemp's Ridley turtles have been washing ashore on Massachusetts beaches in a hypothermic-state called cold-stunning by the dozens. A biologist working to rescue as many as possible told CBS News last year that those numbers had increased to more than 700 animals every year.
2025-04-29 17:27269 view
2025-04-29 17:071352 view
2025-04-29 17:07781 view
2025-04-29 17:041947 view
2025-04-29 16:22939 view
2025-04-29 16:191660 view
Washington — President-elect Donald Trump was namedTime magazine's Person of the Year on Thursday, t
Simone Biles won't be on the floor when the Olympic season officially kicks off for the U.S. women.M
From our collaborating partner “Living on Earth,” public radio’s environmental news magazine, an int