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The mother is 77, the father is only 33 and they’ve just had four babies.

News of the arrivals emerged on Friday from Oudtshoorn in the Western Cape — and far from raising eyebrows, it caused celebration in the conservation world.

That’s because the new family is made up of radiated tortoises, which are classified as critically endangered — just one step below "extinct in the wild"" on Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) lists.

Cango Wildlife Ranch said three of the 6cm hatchlings emerged on March 10, and the fourth from another nest two weeks later.

- The radiated tortoise hatchlings born in March 2019 at Cango Wildlife Ranch in Oudtshoorn.
- One of the radiated tortoise hatchlings feeds on a spekboom leaf.
- A 6cm hatchling is dwarged by a collection of fruit in the wildlife ranch's animal care centre.
- Two of the hatchlings tuck into a hibiscus leaf.
- One of the hatchlings meets its 33-year-old father.
- It's a jungle out there for one of the hatchlings making its way across a lawn.
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Although tortoises do not raise their young in the wild, parents and babies share the same climate-controlled animal care centre at the tourist attraction, and have shown friendly interest in each other.

Marketing manager Mari-Lize Warrington said reptile curator Neal Martin was monitoring the hatchlings closely after a previous batch born to the same parents died several years ago.

"Their living quarters are kept at 25-28°C and include a cozy 40°C heat pad for ‘cuddle time’," she said.

"Their meals include fresh and juicy foods like baby marrows, green beans, rocket, hibiscus flowers, cucumber and spekboom leaves."

The radiated tortoise, which is indigenous to Madagascar, is prized in the wildlife trade for its markings, and has been dubbed the world’s most beautiful tortoise.

“Sadly, beauty has also made them one of the most sought-after tortoises in the world,” said Warrington.

“Human consumption and the illegal pet trade have removed many radiated tortoises from the world and within their native range, Madagascar, they are now only found sporadically.”

Their Cites classification meant they could not be legally exported or imported, yet they were often the subject of black-market sales in south-east Asia.

“Human consumption also remains a major concern in Madagascar, where eerie and emptied shells can be found on the sides of roads, especially over Easter and Christmas,” said Warrington.

The arrival of the Cango hatchlings, on the other hand, was “a milestone for conservation and has brought with it new hope for the entire species’ survival.”


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