In July 2008 after
36 years of attempts at getting Lonesome George (Name given to the tortoise) to breed, researchers of the Galapagos
National Park had their hopes raised when they found a nest with nine eggs laid
by a tortoise that shared the yard with Lonesome
A dispute has broken out between an Ecuadorean ministry
and the Galapagos Islands over where the preserved body of a Galapagos giant
tortoise should be housed.
Lonesome George rose to fame as the last known individual
of his species, but he died in 2012.
The Ecuadorean government wants him to be shown in the
capital Quito.
But the Galapagos local mayor says Lonesome George was a
symbol of the islands and should return home.
Lonesome George was
discovered in 1971, when a Hungarian scientist spotted him on Pinta Island
Leopoldo Bucheli said he should return to the breeding
centre in the National Galapagos Park in Santa Cruz, where George spent the
last 40 years of his life after a Hungarian scientist spotted him on Pinta
Island in 1971. The discovery surprised researchers who thought Pinta Island
tortoises were already extinct.
In a statement, the Ecuadorean Environment Ministry said a
bronze statue of Lonesome George would be placed in the National Park in
Galapagos instead and an education centre constructed for visitors.
George was, the ministry said, part of Ecuador's national
heritage and his body needed to be exhibited in Quito where he could be seen by
the maximum amount of visitors and where the exhibit could be kept in suitable
conditions to maintain its preservation for many years.
Lonesome George is currently on show until 4 January 2015
at the American Museum of
Natural History in New York.
Museum scientists at
the American Museum of Natural History in New York worked closely with
taxidermy experts to preserve Lonesome George. He arrived frozen from the
Galapagos Islands.
He was thought to be
more than 100 years old when he died.
He lived on a diet of cactus, shrubs, grasses, and broad-leaved
plants and was named after a famous 1950s American TV comedian, George Gobel,
who called himself Lonesome George.
He weighed about 165 lbs (75kg); male Galapagos tortoises
can exceed 660 lbs (300kg) and are the largest living tortoises.
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