'Extremely vigorous, pooing well' new baby Galapagos tortoises

05:29 am on 25 March 2021

Auckland Zoo has welcomed 4 new baby Galapagos tortoises. 

A baby Galapagos tortoise at Auckland Zoo Photo: Auckland Zoo

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The ectotherm team have been looking after the newborns since they hatched two months ago to parents Chippie and Smiley. 

They've been keeping the births under wraps until they felt confident that the little tortoises were strong and healthy.

Galapagos tortoises are endangered and very difficult to rear but each tortoise can live for about 175 to 300 years.

A baby Galapagos tortoise at Auckland Zoo Photo: Auckland Zoo

Ectotherm department team leader Don MacFarlane said the babies are making great progress.

He told First Up the four babies were "incredibly vigorous, eating well, pooing - which is a great sign our keepers look for in a healthy animal".

Their parents are 50 years old. The dad is 250kg and the mum is 120kg.

"They've been with us since 1983, from Honolulu."

A baby Galapagos tortoise at Auckland Zoo Photo: Auckland Zoo

MacFarlane said it was a challenge for them to breed in captivity.

"We're at the beginning of a challenging journey, but it is significant that we've got to this stage because we tried so hard for many years to refine their husbandry to such an extent that we're at this stage. 

"It is just a huge reward to open the incubator where they've been for 110 days - to see their little heads poking out their eggshells."

They will be on exhibit in a couple of months.

A baby Galapagos tortoise at Auckland Zoo Photo: Auckland Zoo

The four are believed to be the most to hatch from a single clutch in the Southern Hemisphere.

"A clutch that these four hatched from included 13 eggs. We regularly excavate eggs from our nest boxes in our Galapagos enclosure and go through the throes of excavating almost like an archaeological dig - they are very carefully removed from the ground and placed exactly in the same orientation that we found them in the ground ... into an incubator at 30C degrees."

He said there were still eggs in the incubator that could hatch.

Galapagos tortoises are threatened by introduced species, mammals, goats, pigs.

He said they were now clawing back to about 20,000 of them, compared with a population of 250,000 back in the 16th century.