Nature & Environment
78 Rare Tortoises Vanished From A Breeding Center In Thailand
Elaine Hannah
First Posted: Jun 16, 2016 04:49 AM EDT
The disappearance of 78 rare tortoises from a breeding center in Thailand raised questions to where they went. These creatures worth a total of $85,000 (three million baht) were seized from illegal wildlife trade by the authorities.
The tortoises were brought to Bang Phra Water Bird Breeding Station in eastern Thailand. Tortoise belongs to a family of Testudinidae. They are the shield from their predators with their shells. Among the 78 tortoises, six of them were ploughshares and the rest were radiated. These tortoises are prized for their beauty. The traders sell them as pets in the black market. On the other hand, there is an international treaty banning this trade.
Tortoise such as ploughshare is a rare species. There are only about 500 of them in the forest of northeastern Madagascar. Likewise, the radiated tortoise is critically endangered because of the habitat loss and pet and meat trades.
On the other hand, they disappeared on May 23, 2016. Thailand's Department of National Park, Wildlife and Plant Concentration has sent off investigation into the theft. The head of the facility was also removed and replaced by the senior forest official, according to National Geographic.
Thanyn Netithammakum, director general of the agency said that these tortoises could not just disappear without anyone knowing. He further said that the public needs to know what happened.
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First Posted: Jun 16, 2016 04:49 AM EDT
The disappearance of 78 rare tortoises from a breeding center in Thailand raised questions to where they went. These creatures worth a total of $85,000 (three million baht) were seized from illegal wildlife trade by the authorities.
The tortoises were brought to Bang Phra Water Bird Breeding Station in eastern Thailand. Tortoise belongs to a family of Testudinidae. They are the shield from their predators with their shells. Among the 78 tortoises, six of them were ploughshares and the rest were radiated. These tortoises are prized for their beauty. The traders sell them as pets in the black market. On the other hand, there is an international treaty banning this trade.
Tortoise such as ploughshare is a rare species. There are only about 500 of them in the forest of northeastern Madagascar. Likewise, the radiated tortoise is critically endangered because of the habitat loss and pet and meat trades.
On the other hand, they disappeared on May 23, 2016. Thailand's Department of National Park, Wildlife and Plant Concentration has sent off investigation into the theft. The head of the facility was also removed and replaced by the senior forest official, according to National Geographic.
Thanyn Netithammakum, director general of the agency said that these tortoises could not just disappear without anyone knowing. He further said that the public needs to know what happened.
See Now: NASA's Juno Spacecraft's Rendezvous With Jupiter's Mammoth Cyclone