Support Flows in for Sick Desert Tortoises

Time.com, by Hannah Dreier, AP, 8/29/13 Las Vegas — News that hundreds of
threatened desert tortoises face euthanasia with the pending closure of a
refuge near Las Vegas has generated a storm of reaction that has government
officials scrambling to find alternatives and fielding offers from people
wishing to adopt the reptiles or make donations.

The Associated Press reported this week that the Desert Tortoise
Conservation Center, which has sheltered thousands of displaced tortoises
for 23 years, is scheduled to close in 2014 as funding runs out.
As the location just south of Las Vegas begins to ramp down, it is
euthanizing tortoises deemed too unhealthy to return to the wild. Healthy
tortoises won’t be killed.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service desert tortoise recovery coordinator Roy
Averill-Murray estimated last week that about 50 percent to 60 percent of
the 1,400 tortoises that live at the refuge were sick. Such tortoises cannot
be released into the wild because they could infect their healthy wild brethren.

The estimate prompted a public outcry and debate among the various agencies
connected to the refuge about the number of at-risk tortoises. It also
forced the agency to issue a statement assuring the public that no healthy
tortoises will be killed but saying that euthanasia is the only option for
many of the animals because they are sick. Fish and Wildlife also assigned
four people to field calls and put a message about the situation on its
spokeswoman’s answering machine.

Deputy Fish and Wildlife Service director Carolyn Wells said Wednesday that
the 50 percent estimate of sick tortoises at the facility may be correct,
but added that not all of the ailing animals will be killed. Some of them
could potentially go to research facilities, she said, though she could not
say how many, and she does not yet have commitments from biologists.
Fish and Wildlife operates the center in conjunction with the San Diego Zoo.
Allyson Walsh, associate director for the zoo’s Institute for Conservation
Research, said just 30 percent of the residents are receiving medical
treatment, though some others have been quarantined and need new evaluations.

“The ones that don’t get better and that are sick and suffering will
probably be euthanized because that’s the sensible thing to do,” she said.
She disputed the notion that budget cuts are forcing the reptiles to be put
down. Although the center has housed sickly tortoises for years, Walsh said
they eventually would have been euthanized anyway.

Walsh said sick tortoises cannot be adopted out and she has not been
contacted by any researchers interested in taking in the sick animals.
“That’s a possibility but we wouldn’t transfer an animal to anyone who was
doing destructive research,” she said.

The right thing to do for a sick animal is euthanize it, she said.
Seth Webster disagrees.

Webster, a 36 year old programmer from New York, created a Change.org
petition that together with a similar one on the site has drawn more than
3,000 signatures. He said he is working with a Florida tortoise refuge that
recently bought land in Nevada to see if Fish and Wildlife will transfer the
tortoises, or at least let an outside evaluator decide which animals are so
sick they should be killed.

“Animals have a very strong will to survive,” he said. “These tortoises live
to 100 years. If we euthanize him, are we robbing him of 30 years? It
doesn’t seem fair to euthanize them just because the tortoises are sick and
someone ran out of money.”

Desert tortoises have made their rocky homes in Utah, California, Arizona
and Nevada for 200 million years. But the prehistoric animal has some
unfortunate evolutionary quirks, including a susceptibility to flu-like
respiratory infections and difficulties settling in to new homes. They are
also sensitive to change as the tortoises sometimes dehydrate themselves by
voiding a year’s worth of stored water when handled.

These weaknesses have combined with widespread habitat destruction in the
quickly developing Southwest to dramatically reduce the tortoises’ numbers.
The Bureau of Land Management has partially funded the conservation center
through fees imposed on developers who disturb tortoise habitat, but when
the housing bubble burst several years ago, that funding dropped far below
what was needed to run the center.

“Here’s an upside to this. It’s gone international,” U.S. Fish and Wildlife
spokeswoman Jeannie Stafford said. “We have gotten hundreds of people saying
they would like to adopt. Thousands of people signing petitions. It’s been
people wanting to help us with the situation.”

But most of the would-be tortoise Good Samaritans cannot actually adopt the
animals. Federal laws intended to protect the reptiles ban their
transportation across state lines.

People who live in Nevada can adopt the slowpokes through the Desert
Tortoise Group. But they should know that owners who kill or release their
long-lived pets could face prison time.

The Humane Society of the United States is setting up a fund this week for
out-of-staters who want to help but cannot take a tortoise home.
Despite the overwhelming response, the Bureau of Land Management is not
reconsidering its plan to pull funding that goes toward the center’s $1
million annual budget.

“Although it’s wonderful that people want to give money, it won’t change the
outcome for the Desert Conservation Center,” BLM spokeswoman Erica
Haspiel-Szlosek said. “There just isn’t money to keep it going, nor is it
really the best use of conservation funds.”

The agency plans to redirect the $810 fee that developers pay for each acre
of tortoise habitat they disturb to environmental preservation efforts.
The center has historically taken in about 1,000 tortoises a year, but will
stop accepting new residents in coming months.

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