Sunday, May 17, 2009


Video Cameras and Lonesome George

The folks are now attaching TV cameras to the backs of the world's largest tortoises. The news from Ecuador makes me chuckle. Live video of tortoises moving at a snail's pace would really make an interesting live cam. (Or not!) Here are the specifics.

QUITO, Ecuador - Scientists in the Galapagos Islands have installed cameras on the shells of giant tortoises in a study that could shed light on how they live, mate and migrate.
Galapagos National Park official Washington Tapia says the research project includes two tortoises in captivity and a third in the wild.


Tapia says scientists hope to learn about tortoises' nocturnal behavior, reproductive cycles and seasonal migration.

This news brings to mind the famous Galapagos turtle, Lonesome George!


Lonesome George is the last known individual of the Pinta Island Tortoise, subspecies Geochelone nigra abingdoni, one of eleven subspecies of Galápagos tortoise native to the Galápagos Islands. He has been labelled the rarest creature in the world, and is a potent symbol for conservation efforts in the Galápagos and internationally. It is thought that he was named after a character played by American actor George Gobel.

George was first seen on the island of Pinta on 1 December 1971 by American snail biologist Joseph Vagvolgyi. The island's vegetation had been decimated by introduced feral goats, and the indigenous G. n. abingdoni population had been reduced to a single individual. Relocated for his safety to the Charles Darwin Research Station, George was penned with two females of a different subspecies, Geochelone nigra becki from Wolf Island, in the hope that his genotype would be retained in the resulting progeny. Any offspring successfully hatched from George and his consorts would be intergrades, not purebreds of the Pinta subspecies.


George is estimated to be 60–90 years of age, and is in good health. A prolonged effort to exterminate goats introduced to Pinta is now complete and the vegetation of the island is starting to return to its former state.



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