8 Galapagos Tortoises Found Killed
Posted on: Wednesday, 4 July 2007, 00:20 CDT
QUITO, Ecuador - Rangers found the shells of eight endangered giant tortoises believed to have been killed by poachers, Galapagos National Park officials said Tuesday.
Poachers sometimes kill the protected tortoises and use the meat for consumption or for sale on the black market.
Of the remains discovered, five were up to 15 years old, and three were adult females - possibly older than 80 - the park said in a statement.
The park called their deaths a great loss, saying some had been hatched from artificially incubated eggs and raised for seven years by scientists before being released into their natural habitat.
Galapagos Islands authorities estimate there are about 7,000 of the giant tortoises left.
Some 625 miles off Ecuador's Pacific coast, the Galapagos are world-renowned for their unique plant and animal life. Charles Darwin's observations of the islands' finches inspired his theory of evolution.
Source: Associated Press/AP Online
Related Articles
- Mosquito Evolution Troubling For Galapagos Wildlife
- No kids for 90-year-old tortoise
- Endangered Galapagos Tortoise Mates After 36 Years
- Tortoise Energy Capital Corp. Announces Special Rate Period for $60 Million Series B Auction Rate Senior Notes
- Tourism, Over-Population and Overfishing Have Become the Blight of the Galapagos
- 7 Beached Pilot Whales Die on Galapagos
- 12 Whales Beached on Galapagos Islands
- Galapagos Volcano Erupts for Third Day
- Galapagos tortoises unhurt by volcanic lava
User Comments (0)


RSS Feeds