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Galapagos giant tortoise Diego takes a rest
JOB done, prolific Galapagos giant tortoise Diego is being released back into the wild after being credited by authorities with almost single-handedly saving his species from extinction. The 100-year-old tortoise, who was recruited along with 14 other adults for a captive breeding program, will be returned to his native island of Espanola in March, the Galapagos National Parks service said.
“About 1,800 tortoises have been returned to Espanola and now with natural reproduction we have approximately 2,000 tortoises,” Jorge Carrion, the park’s director, said. “This shows that they are able to grow, they are able to reproduce, they are able to develop.”
Diego’s contribution to the program on Santa Cruz Island was particularly noteworthy, with park rangers believing him responsible for being the patriarch of at least 40 percent of the 2,000-tortoise population. Around 50 years ago, there were only two males and 12 females of Diego’s species alive on Espanola, and they were too spread out to reproduce.
Diego was brought in from California’s San Diego Zoo to join the breeding program which was set up in the mid-1960s to save his species, Chelonoidis hoodensis.
The PNG believes he was taken from the Galapagos in the first half of the 20th century by a scientific expedition. Now, Diego is returning to his original home “almost eight decades after being extracted,” the park service said, adding that he had lived at the San Diego Zoo for several decades.
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