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Contact: Susan M. Tellem
Susan@tortoise.com
Giant Tortoises Overwhelm
U.S. Rescues
American Tortoise Rescue
Calls for a Moratorium on Sales
Malibu, CA – August 28, 2008
–
Turtle and tortoise wildlife groups and rescue organizations throughout
North America, led by Malibu based American Tortoise Rescue (ATR), are
calling on the pet industry, reptile wholesalers and private breeders to
stop the sale of giant tortoises commonly called sulcatas.
Geochelone sulcata
is a hardy and personable species of tortoise. Native to sub-Saharan
Africa, it became part of the lucrative pet trade during the 1990s. It has
an engaging nature, is attractive and sells for anywhere between $50 and
$300. These traits make it one of the most commonly purchased pet tortoises
in North America. Unknown to the unwary buyer, however, is that sulcatas
are the third largest species of tortoise in the world weighing up to 200
pounds or more, attaining this size in a very short period of time. Adult
female sulcatas can easily produce 50 –100 eggs a year. It is not unusual
to see hundreds of hatchlings for sale at reptile shows even though selling
any turtle or tortoise in the U.S. under four inches is illegal.
According to Susan Tellem, co-founder of ATR, the sale of sulcatas today is
similar to the pet trade's large-scale sale of iguanas during the early to
mid-90s. Many people bought cute baby iguanas not realizing that they would
grow to as long as six feet and become aggressive. Just like iguanas,
Sulcata breeders and pet stores that sell them create problems that other
people, especially reptile rescuers, have to solve.
"The pet industry constantly looks for
small, exotic animals with a big price tag," Tellem says. "We've conducted
a survey of sulcata owners about what they were told when they purchased
their tortoises. Whether at a pet store or reptile show - the answer is the
same. 'It won't get bigger than its tank.' This is patently ridiculous
and often a deliberate lie.”
Tellem
says, "New owners quickly become aware of the difficulties associated with
having a potentially destructive non-housebroken animal of this size. A
fully-grown sulcata is strong and aggressive and can easily move furniture
and damage or destroy a typical house or apartment wall. When they start to
dig up the property, it looks something like a mine field."
Tellem,
who founded the nonprofit ATR 16 years ago with her husband, Marshall
Thompson, says, "Many owners assume that when the tortoise becomes a
problem, zoos will take them. This is simply not true. Zoos are not
interested in cast-off pets."
Tellem
says that the zoos, instead, refer people to her rescue, as well as others.
She has placed hundreds into good homes but it is not the answer because it
is not easy finding places with a half-acre or more, which is what a sulcata
needs. Based on the record number of hatchlings and juveniles sold in pets
stores as compared to hundreds in the ‘90s, this is the beginning of a
deluge of unwanted pets.
Tellem
adds that some owners mistakenly think that they can sell the huge animal
for a large profit. "There is no market for adult sulcatas," Tellem says.
"The only options remaining are to dump the animal in the wild where they
will definitely end up dead, or to give it up for adoption to a rescue group
like ours." She added that her rescue is full as are most others and so the
only option is finding a compassionate adopter who is willing to put up with
the destruction.
Aside
from the potential for a slow death by freezing or starving that “dumped”
sulcatas face, there are other problems. These include infecting native
wildlife with parasites and foreign diseases. This could result in the
eradication of already threatened native species. There is also the issue
of introduction of yet another non-native species into a precariously
balanced ecosystem.
Tellem
says that the option of placing the animal with a rescue organization or
rehabber sounds good to most overwhelmed owners. Unfortunately, of those
thousands of cute tortoises that are sold every year, rescue organizations
can only take a few of them once they are huge.
"Since the sulcata can live 50 years or more, and because the males fight
when placed together, overcrowded rescues run out of space. At that point,
there is no solution," says Tellem.
Tellem
and Thompson say that breeders won't turn their backs on an obvious money
making machine. "So what we request is simply market driven economics.
People shouldn’t buy sulcatas. Pet stores should stop selling them.
Reptile shows must have a 'no sulcata' policy. Only then will breeders have
no choice but to stop breeding them," the pair agrees.
American Tortoise Rescue (ATR), Malibu, Calif.,
is a
nonprofit founded in 1990 to provide for the protection of all species of
tortoise and turtle. It provides permanent sanctuary to abandoned and lost
tortoises, as well as those that are confiscated from law enforcement and
require temporary housing. For more information, contact:
American Tortoise Rescue at
www.tortoise.com;
or email info@tortoise.com.