Lonesome George, last member of species of Galápagos giant tortoise, dies
Galápagos National Park announces the death of conservation icon believed to 
have been about 100 
years old
Reuters
guardian.co.uk, Sunday 24 June 2012 18.23 EDT

Galápagos National Park have announced the death of Lonesome George, pictured 
here in 2001. 
Photograph: Bob Strong/Reuters
Lonesome George, the last remaining tortoise of his kind and a conservation 
icon, has died of 
unknown causes, Galápagos National Park authorities have said. He was believed 
to be about 100 
years old.
Lonesome George was found in 1972 and had become a symbol of Ecuador's 
Galápagos Islands, 
which attracted approximately 180,000 visitors last year.
"This morning the park ranger in charge of looking after the tortoises found 
Lonesome George. His 
body was motionless," the head of the Galápagos National Park, Edwin Naula, 
said on Sunday. "His 
life cycle came to an end."
George was the last member of a species of giant tortoise from La Pinta, one of 
the smallest islands 
in the Galápagos.
The Galápagos giant tortoises, which can live up to 200 years old, were among 
the species that 
helped Charles Darwin formulate his theory of evolution in the 19th century.
The Galápagos National Park is considering embalming George's body so that it 
can be displayed in 
the park, Naula said.
A spokesperson said the park plans to carry out tests to determine what may 
have killed the tortoise.
Scientists had been trying to get George to mate since 1993, when they 
introduced two female 
tortoises of a different subspecies into his pen. They laid eggs twice, but 
they were infertile.
The pen where George lived was visited by thousands of tourists every year, who 
often had to 
scramble with each other to take pictures of one of the rarest creatures on 
Earth.
The islands often attract celebrities, including Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt 
earlier this year.
Tortoises were hunted for their meat by sailors and fishermen to the point of 
extinction, while their 
habitat has been eaten away by goats introduced from the mainland.
Some 20,000 giant tortoises still live on the Galápagos.

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