Desert Tortoise

Desert Tortoise
Conservation status: Vulnerable
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Reptilia
Order:Testudines
Suborder:Cryptodira
Superfamily:Testudinoidea
Family:Testudinidae
Genus:Gopherus
Species:G. agassizii
Binomial name
Gopherus agassizii
(Cooper, 1863)

The Desert Tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) is a tortoise native to the Mojave desert and Sonoran desert of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico.

The upper shells of these tortoises may attain a length of 6 to 15 inches (15 to 38 cm), with males being slightly larger than females. Shells are high-domed, and greenish-tan to dark brown in color. Desert tortoises can grow from 4–6" in height and weigh 8–15 lbs (4–7 kg) when fully grown. The front limbs have heavy, claw-like scales and are flattend for digging. Back legs are more stumpy and elephantine.

The tortoise is able to live where ground temperature may exceed 140 degrees Fahrenheit (60 degrees Celsius) because of its ability to dig underground burrows and escape the heat. At least 95% of its life is spent in burrows. There, it is also protected from freezing winter weather while dormant, from November through February or March. With its burrow, this tortoise creates a subterranean environment that can be beneficial to other reptiles, mammals, birds and invertebrates.

The Desert tortoise is an herbivore. Grasses for the bulk of its diet, but also eats herbs, annual wildflowers, some shrubs, and new growth of cactuses, as well as their fruit and flowers. Rocks and soil are also ingested, perhaps as a means of maintaining intestinal digestive bacteria and/or as a source of supplementary calcium or other minerals. As with birds, stones may also function as gastroliths, enabling more efficient digestion of plant material in the stomach.

Much of the tortoise�s water intake comes from moisture in the grasses and wildflowers they consume in the spring. A large urinary bladder can store over forty percent of the tortoise's body weight in water, urea, uric acid and nitrogenous wastes. During very dry times they may give off waste as a white paste rather than a watery urine. During periods of adequate rainfall, they drink copiously from any pools they find, and eliminate solid urates. Adult tortoises can survive a year or more without access to water.

One defense mechanism the tortoise has when it is handled or molested is to empty its bladder. This can leave the tortoise in a very vulnerable condition in dry areas, and they should never be alarmed, handled or picked up in the wild.

These tortoises mate in the late summer, from August to September. They typically lay 4-8 eggs per clutch, with 2-3 clutches per year. The eggs are hard, chalky and elliptical or spherical and buried in a funnel-shaped nest. They are incubated for 90-120 days. Hatchlings from only a few eggs out of every hundred actually survive the 7-8 years it takes to reach full adulthood.

Scientists have divided the Desert tortoise into two types: the Mojave and Sonoran Desert tortoises, with a possible third type in the Black Mountains of northwestern Arizona. They live in a variety of habitats, from sandy flats to rocky foothills. They have a strong proclivity in the Mojave desert for alluvial fans, washes and canyons where more suitable soils for den construction might be found. They range from near sea level to around 3,500 feet in elevation. It is believed that, in their entire lives, these tortoises rarely move more than two miles from their natal nest.

Predators and conservation status

Ravens, gila monsters, kit foxes, badgers, roadrunners and coyotes are all natural predators of the Desert tortoise. They prey on juveniles, which are 2-3 inches long with a thin, delicate shell. Ravens have caused more than 50 percent of juvenile tortoise deaths in some areas of the Mojave Desert. Other dangers include illegal collection and malicious vandalism by humans, habitat destruction, and competition with cattle for forage plants.

Desert Tortoise populations have declined by 90 percent since the 1980s and it is listed as threatened. It is unlawful to touch, harm, harass or collect wild Desert tortoises. It is, however, possible to adopt captive tortoises through the Tortoise Adoption Program (TAP) in Arizona, or through the Bureau of Land Management in Nevada. When adopted in Nevada, they will have a computer chip embedded on their back for reference. Under Arizona law, one tortoise per family member may be possessed if the tortoises are obtained from a captive source which is properly documented. Captive sources include urban foundlings, unwanted captives, and their progeny.

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