A 90-Year-Old Tortoise Named Mr. Pickles Is a New Dad of Three
The
radiated tortoise is the oldest animal at the Houston Zoo. He has been
with his partner, Mrs. Pickles, since she arrived in 1996. The mom and
hatchlings are doing fine.
Three radiated tortoises, Dill, Gherkin and Jalapeño, were born at the Houston Zoo last week, officials said.Credit...Jackelin Reyna/Houston Zoo
The oldest animal at the Houston Zoo, a radiated tortoise born nearly a century ago, is finally a father.
The zoo
announced last week that Mr. Pickles and Mrs. Pickles welcomed three
tortoise hatchlings: Dill, Gherkin and Jalapeño. (All three names are
comfortably in the family of pickle preserves.)
It
was an astounding feat, zoo officials said, not only because Mr.
Pickles is 90 years old, but also because the critically endangered
species rarely produces offspring.
Mr.
Pickles has been a resident of the zoo for 36 years and partnered with
Mrs. Pickles, now 53, since her arrival in 1996. While radiated
tortoises can live for up to 150 years, exactly how long they can
reproduce is unknown, said Jessica Reyes, a zoo spokeswoman.
The
births were even more improbable because the hatchlings likely wouldn’t
have survived if a zookeeper had not noticed Mrs. Pickles laying her
eggs, the zoo said. The soil in Houston isn’t conducive to keeping the
burrowed eggs that Madagascar native tortoises lay at the right
temperature and humidity, so the keepers moved them into the Reptile and
Amphibian House.
Radiated tortoises rarely produce offspring, which made news of their hatchings even more exciting, the zoo said.Credit...Jackelin Reyna/Houston Zoo
The
eggs were closely watched and monitored for more than five months as
the zookeepers cooled them off in a chiller at about 50 degrees to mimic
what would happen in nature, before returning them to room temperature
and eventually placing them in an incubator in the 80s.
The
new trio will remain behind the scenes in the reptile and amphibian
dwelling, until they are big enough to join their parents, the zoo said.
Jon
Rold, supervisor of herpetology and entomology at the Houston Zoo, said
it was a matter of luck that Mr. and Mrs. Pickles had bred successfully
and that the eggs had been found in time.
“If
you don’t see the female actually digging a hole and laying the eggs,
it can very easily be missed,” Mr. Rold said. “And if it is missed and
the eggs don’t get in the proper setup soon enough, they just won’t
develop.”
Mr. Pickles was hatched in
the 1930s and eventually made his way to Houston in the 1980s, after he
was collected and traveled throughout Europe in the 1950s, Mr. Rold
said.
Mr. and Mrs. Pickles have been companions since Mrs. Pickles arrived at the zoo in 1996.Credit...Houston Zoo
It’s unclear how many radiated tortoises remain in the wild,
according to the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology
Institute, but their numbers are declining and the species could become
extinct.
Despite radiated tortoises being an endangered species
and an international treaty protecting them, the animals continue to be
in demand on the black market because of the distinctive, intricate
yellow star pattern on their shells that gives them their name. In Madagascar, they are sometimes given as wedding gifts, and in China, some people will pay about $50 to eat them, the Smithsonian said.
In
2018, nearly 10,000 of the tortoises were found inside a Madagascar
home by local authorities who believed that the animals were going to be
smuggled out of the country, according to National Geographic.
No comments:
Post a Comment