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Hogle Zoo helps rescue over 10,000 endangered tortoises in Madagascar

(Susie Bartlett / The Wildlife Conservation Society via AP) In this photo taken Tuesday, April, 24, 2018, and supplied by The Wildlife Alliance, a critically endangered radiated tortoise is recovering from capture by wildlife traffickers in Madagascar at feeding time at a wildlife facility where it is being taken care of by international conservationists. More than 10,000 of the tortoises had been crammed into a home in Toliara, Madagascar, with no access to food or water until police found them. The radiated tortoises had likely been poached for the illegal pet trade, possibly in Asia.

Johannesburg • International conservationists in Madagascar have been treating more than 10,000 critically endangered radiated tortoises that were seized from traffickers who had crammed them into a home with no access to food or water.

The Turtle Survival Alliance and other groups are caring for the tortoises at a wildlife facility in the Ifaty region of the Indian Ocean nation, though hundreds have died from illness and dehydration.

The alliance says the radiated tortoises were found by police at a home in Toliara on April 10 and that they likely had been collected for the illegal pet trade, possibly in Asia.

(Courtesy of Hogle Zoo) Hogle Zoo is helping the Turtle Survival Alliance care for thousands of endangered radiated tortoises rescued from a home in Madagascar.

Radiated tortoises are coveted for the star pattern on their shells.

Most of the surviving tortoises appear “fairly healthy,” said Susie Bartlett, a veterinarian with the U.S.-based Wildlife Conservation Society who described the challenges of working with the huge number of tortoises.

Each morning, “ill tortoises that are under veterinary care are collected from their enclosures and brought to the clinic in large tubs and pans,” Bartlett wrote in an email. “Sick animals are given subcutaneous fluids to rehydrate them and antibiotics if needed, along with vitamin supplementation. This is easily done with the sick tortoises that do not have much strength to retract their heads and legs.”

As tortoises get stronger, it gets more difficult to extend a leg out of a shell to find a fold of skin for an injection, according to Bartlett. Some of the rescued animals have eye and mouth infections and are given pain medicine.

Conservationists from Zoo Knoxville in Tennessee, Hogle Zoo in Utah, Dallas Zoo and Oklahoma City Zoo are participating in the rescue. About 1,500 radiated tortoises deemed to be healthy have already been moved to other facilities in Madagascar.

At this time, a Hogle Zoo veterinary technician is administering health care to the rescued tortoises, as well as building more holding pens and shade structures for the overburdened triage centers, according to a news release from the zoo.

“The number or tortoises from this confiscation is so overwhelming that we have to invest more in building new housing, hiring additional staff and security guards and getting food for these animals,” Christina Castellano, the vice president of Hogle Zoo and a conservation biologist with over 20 years of experience in Madagascar, said in the release. “We really have to ramp up what we’re doing to give them the care they need to survive.”

Castellano and a Hogle Zoo reptile keeper also will go to Madagascar to support the operation.

Radiated tortoises used to be found along roadways in the dry, spiny forests of south and southwest Madagascar where they live, but poaching and habitat loss have taken a heavy toll, according to a “red list” of threatened species compiled by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The list says Asian smugglers are known to collect the tortoises and that tortoise meat is popular among some people in Madagascar.

Larrisa Beth Turner of The Salt Lake Tribune contributed to this report.