Saddle-backed Mauritius giant tortoise

Saddle-backed Mauritius giant tortoise
Skull of Cylindraspis inepta
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Family: Testudinidae
Genus: Cylindraspis
Species: C. inepta
Binomial name
Cylindraspis inepta
Günther, 1873
Synonyms[1]
  • Testudo neraudii Gray, 1831 (nomen oblitum)
  • Testudo inepta Günther, 1873
  • Testudo boutonii Günther, 1875
  • Testudo sauzieri Gadow, 1894
  • Geochelone inepta Pritchard, 1967
  • Geochelone sauzieri Pritchard, 1967
  • Cylindraspis inepta Bour, 1981

The Saddle-backed Mauritius giant tortoise (Cylindraspis inepta) is an extinct species of tortoises in the Testudinidae family. It was endemic to Mauritius. The last records of this tortoise date to the early 18th century.

Description

One of two different giant tortoise species which were endemic to Mauritius, this saddle-backed species seems to have specialised in browsing higher bushes and low-hanging branches of trees. Its lower, flatter sister species grazed grass, as well as fallen leaves and fruit on forest floors. Although similarly sized, the two species differed substantially in their body shape and bone structure.

This species in particular seems to have been the ancestor of all the other four species of Cylindraspis giant tortoise of the Mascarene islands, and to have accidentally drifted to the surrounding islands of Reunion and Rodrigues in order to do so. Its species name of "inepta" is due to its supposed propensity for falling into the ocean.

Extinction

Engraving from 1601 showing the two Mauritian species of giant tortoise, far left

This species was previously numerous throughout Mauritius - both on the main island and on all the surrounding islets. As Mauritius was the first of the Mascarene islands to be settled, it was also the first to face the extermination of its biodiversity - including the tortoises. The tortoise species, like many island species, were reportedly friendly, curious and not afraid of humans.

With the arrival of the Dutch, vast numbers of both tortoise species were slaughtered - either for food (for humans or pigs) or to be burned for fat and oil.

In addition, they introduced invasive alien species such as rats, cats and pigs, which ate the tortoises' eggs and hatchlings.

The species was likely extinct on the main island of Mauritius by about 1700, and on most of the surrounding islets by 1735.

Round island refuge

The 1846 Lloyd report suggests that at least one of the two Mauritian tortoise species might have survived on Round Island (just north of Mauritius) until much later.[2][3]

The Lloyd expedition in 1844 found several giant tortoises surviving on Round island, and one of the explorers, Mr Corby, "captured a female land tortoise in one of the caves on Round Island and brought it to Mauritius, where it produced numerous progeny, which distributed among his acquaintance."

While a 1845 hatchling could hypothetically have lived into the twenty first century, it is not known what happened to the hatchlings, and Round island itself had goats and rabbits introduced to it soon afterwards. This led to the total extinction of the tortoises in their last refuge, and later, at the unknown point when the last of Mr Corby's hatchlings died or was killed, the species would have become totally extinct.[4]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cylindraspis inepta.

See also

Portal iconTurtles portal

References

  1. Fritz Uwe; Peter Havaš (2007). "Checklist of Chelonians of the World". Vertebrate Zoology 57 (2): 277–278. ISSN 1864-5755. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-12-17. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  2. Cheke AS, Bour R: Unequal struggle—how humans displaced the tortoise's dominant place in island ecosystems. In: Gerlach J, ed. Western Indian Ocean Tortoises: biodiversity. 2014.
  3. http://aobpla.oxfordjournals.org/content/7/plv085.full
  4. A.Cheke, J.P.Hume: Lost Land of the Dodo: The Ecological History of Mauritius, Réunion and Rodrigues. Bloomsbury Publishing. 2010. p.211.


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