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FACT SHEET
Tortoises for many years were been collected from the wild and exported to
Europe from their native countries with the result that in some areas they
became almost extinct. Tortoises conservation has come a long way since
then with most species now listed on the CITIES appendix and protected by
law in their native countries, but still in many countries are killed by
cars on roads or by insecticides.
These are enough reasons for all of us to treasure each tortoise in our
care, not as just a recreational hobby but instead as a genuine
contribution to nature conservation.
Do’s and Don’ts
- If you have a tortoise already which you want to get rid of, do not
simply release it, approach your local tortoise association and they will
place it in the care of someone who can look after it.
- If you are good at keeping tortoises do not start a collection of many
species. Instead, attempt to breed animals of one or few species.
- Try to establish contact with other tortoise fanciers in your
neighbourhood to share mutually beneficial information about your animals.
- If you are thinking of buying or adopting a tortoise read up on
tortoises care to find out whether you will be able to care properly for
such an animal possibly for many years. Give careful consideration to
whether you really want a tortoise or whether some other animal will do
instead.
- When you receive an unknown tortoise you first have to find out what
species it is. Only then will you be able to determine what the animal
needs eg:
- what sort of habitat it comes from, what sort of enclosure we have
to provide
- what temperature it requires
- what food it must be given,
- whether the animal must hibernate during the winter months
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