World

Ecuador policeman held over 185 baby tortoises in suitcase

15 of the juvenile reptiles die as prosecutors level crimes against wildlife charges against cop

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 30 Mar 2021 7:00PM

Ecuador policeman held over 185 baby tortoises in suitcase
Ecuador’s Environment Ministry says that most of the 185 smuggled tortoises from the Galapagos Islands to its mainland have survived and were taken to a breeding center on Santa Cruz island, but were not in good health. – AFP pic, March 30, 2021

QUITO – An Ecuadorian policeman has been arrested after airport officials in the Galapagos Islands discovered 185 baby giant tortoises stuffed in a suitcase to be trafficked, prosecutors said yesterday.

The reptiles, no more than 3 months old, were found in luggage destined for Guayaquil in mainland Ecuador during a routine inspection on Baltra island Sunday, authorities said.

The juvenile critters had been wrapped in plastic, and ten of them had died by the time the suitcase was opened.

Another five have died since, possibly due to stress, the environment ministry reported yesterday.

The policeman will be charged with crimes against wildlife and risks a 3-year prison sentence, the prosecutor’s office in Ecuador tweeted.

The Galapagos Islands, some 1,000km off the coast of Ecuador, are a protected wildlife area and home to unique species of flora and fauna.

The Galapagos are where Charles Darwin’s observation of birds and tortoises on different islands gave rise to his theory of natural selection.

The reptiles – the largest living tortoises in the world – are the volcanic islands’ star attraction, but are listed as endangered.

The country’s Environment Ministry said the surviving tortoises were taken to a breeding center on the neighboring Santa Cruz island.

“The veterinary evaluation found that they are not in good health,” it added.

According to the Galapagos Conservation Trust, the giant tortoise arrived in Galapagos from mainland South America some two to three million years ago, diversifying into 14 species on different islands.

After the death of Lonesome George, the last Pinta island tortoise in 2012, 12 species are thought to remain today, scattered over 10 islands, the trust website says.

About 1.5m to 1.8m long, the slow-breeding creatures can live to over 100 years.

On Twitter, Environment Minister Marcelo Mata on Sunday blasted “these crimes against Ecuadorans’ wild fauna and natural heritage.” – AFP, March 30, 2021

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