Rescued Desert Tortoises to Be Euthanized for Lack of Funding
28 August 13
or decades, the vulnerable desert tortoise has led a sheltered existence.
Developers have taken pains to keep the animal safe. It's been protected from meddlesome hikers by the threat of prison time. And wildlife officials have set the species up on a sprawling conservation reserve outside Las Vegas.
But the pampered desert dweller now faces a threat from the very people who have nurtured it.
Federal funds are running out at the Desert Tortoise Conservation Center and officials plan to close the site and euthanize hundreds of the tortoises they've been caring for since the animals were added to the endangered species list in 1990.
"It's the lesser of two evils, but it's still evil," said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service desert tortoise recovery coordinator Roy Averill-Murray during a visit to the soon-to-be-shuttered reserve at the southern edge of the Las Vegas Valley last week.
Biologists went about their work examining tortoises for signs of disease as Averill-Murray walked among the reptile pens. But the scrubby 220-acre refuge area will stop taking new animals in the coming months. Most that arrive in the fall will simply be put down, late-emerging victims of budget problems that came from the same housing bubble that put a neighborhood of McMansions at the edge of the once-remote site.
The Bureau of Land Management has paid for the holding and research facility with fees imposed on developers who disturb tortoise habitat on public land. As the housing boom swept through southern Nevada in the 2000s, the tortoise budget swelled. But when the recession hit, the housing market contracted, and the bureau and its local government partners began struggling to meet the center's $1 million annual budget.
Housing never fully recovered, and the federal mitigation fee that developers pay has brought in just $290,000 during the past 11 months. Local partners, which collect their own tortoise fees, have pulled out of the project.
"With the money going down and more and more tortoises coming in, it never would have added up," said BLM spokeswoman Hillerie Patton.
Back at the conservation center, a large refrigerator labeled "carcass freezer" hummed in the desert sun as scientists examined the facility's 1,400 inhabitants to find those hearty enough to release into the wild. Officials expect to euthanize more than half the animals in the coming months in preparation for closure at the end of 2014.
The desert tortoise is a survivor that has toddled around the Southwest for 200 million years. But ecologists say the loss of the conservation center represents a harmful blow in southern Nevada for an animal that has held onto some unfortunate evolutionary quirks that impede its coexistence with strip malls, new homes and solar plants.
Laws to protect the panicky plodders ban hikers from picking them up, since the animals are likely dehydrate themselves by voiding a year's worth of stored water when handled. When they're moved, they nearly always attempt to trudge back to their burrows, foiling attempts to keep them out of harm's way. They're also beset by respiratory infections and other illnesses.
No more than 100,000 tortoises are thought to survive in the habitat where millions once burrowed across parts of Utah, California, Arizona and Nevada.
The animals were once so abundant that tourists would scoop them up as souvenirs. Many quickly realized the shy grass-eaters don't make ideal pets. (For one thing, they can live for 100 years.) And once the species was classified as threatened on the endangered species list, people rushed to give them back.
Former pets make up the majority of the tortoises at the conservation center, where they spend their days staring down jackrabbits and ducking out of the sun into protective PVC piping tucked into the rocky desert floor. Most of these animals are not suitable for release, either infected with disease or otherwise too feeble to survive.
Averill-Murray looks as world-weary as the animals he studies. He wants to save at least the research function of the center and is looking for alternative funding sources.
"It's not the most desirable model to fund recovery - on the back of tortoise habitat," he said.
Comments
The first shot fired at Syria will cost more than the expense required to maintain this facility--and the tortoises--inde finitely, if properly managed.
You have to know that Obama, the Democrats and the Republicans fully know what they're doing and it has absolutely nothing to do with preserving life. You have to know that our leaders are acting as if they have their blinders on and their ears stuffed with wax so they don't have to see or hear from their constituents that we want no more war, no more killing, that we know the real reasons why our govt is doing what it's doing, and it has nothing to do with improving the human condition.
Our govt is not just threatening the desert tortoise, but they are also threatening to decimate the wild mustang population in this country as well as the wolf population and the bison population, primarily because of ranchers and hunters who have more influence with Congress and Obama than the American people.
There are private sanctuaries for wild life in this country who would gladly take care of these tortoises. I personally live in the Tucson, Arizona, area where these tortoises live and I am aware of several wildlife sanctuaries.
http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/water-environment/officials-rebut-report-hundreds-tortoises-will-be-euthanized
stan levin
What exactly doesn't our government understand about the words "Rescued Tortoises" and its opposite meaning "Euthanized Tortoises?"
When you rescue anything and then euthanize that anything, then you're not really rescuing them, are you? It's an oxymoron.
Yankee go home. Leave the desert alone.
I grew up in California and when I was a kid one of these tortoises wandered into our yard. We played with it for a while and fed it. We loved it. Then one day, it wandered on. I'm sure they will do that until all humans have exterminated themselves.