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Joshua Tree Turtle and
Tortoise Rescue Telephone: 760-369-1235 |
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Joshua Tree Tortoise Rescue. We are a local grassroots, non-profit
organization permitted by the State of California Department of Fish and Game to
rescue and rehabilitate the endangered California Desert Tortoise. Our mission
is dedicated to the survival of the desert tortoise through education and
adoption programs, working closely with government and military agencies,
schools, community groups and local businesses.
During the 1920's, there were 1000 California desert tortoise per square mile in
our local Mojave desert. Within only 70 years, in 1990, the desert tortoise was
listed as a threatened species through the US Fish and Wildlife Endangered
Species Act. The tortoises' decline began primarily with loss of habitat
from cattle grazing on the delicate desert grasses that are the base of the
tortoise diet and then human encroachment on desert land. Currently, the
tortoises' main survival danger is raven predation on hatchlings and the upper
respiratory disease syndrome (URDS) which is believed to have been introduced
into the wild population in the early 1980's. According to the California
Department of Fish and Game guidelines, it is unlawful to release a tortoise
back into the wild after any length in captivity. This regulation is to prevent
the spread of the disease.
And that is why the Joshua Tree Tortoise Rescue is in operation.
The Joshua Tree Tortoise Rescue's dedicated volunteers spend
almost all their spare time in outreach programs teaching local residents - from
pre-school children to seniors - not to handle or touch a desert tortoise they
may find in their area. If you do find a desert tortoise, DO take pictures, get
down and look at it, watch it to see how it moves and what it eats, and then
walk away knowing how fortunate you are to have seen a vanishing, regal
creature.
While driving on desert roads, DO keep an eye out for tortoises crossing. If you
encounter one and have plenty of room to pass, drive slowly and carefully around
it. If you don't have room to pass, stop and let the tortoise move across
the road of its own accord. If the tortoise is on a paved road and in immediate
danger, pull over to a safe place. Walk over to the tortoise, letting it see you
approaching. Lift it slowly and gently, keeping it level and low to the ground.
Move it to a safe place off the road, no more than 100 yards away, in the same
direction it was traveling. Carefully set it down, preferably in the shade of a
shrub. It is imperative not to frighten the tortoise so that it does not void
its vital internal water supply.
If you find a tortoise that is sick or injured (runny nose, hit by car, dog
attack), please call the Joshua Tree Tortoise Rescue at 760-369-1235. We will
come to the site and retrieve the tortoise. We begin medical treatment
immediately, and after their complete rehabilitation, they are placed up for
adoption to qualified caretakers. Again, please note that if a healthy tortoise
is taken into your possession, it is in "captivity" and cannot be
released back into the wild, and must be turned over to the Rescue and/or
adopted by you. A tortoise can live to be 80 to 100 years old, so taking one in
is more than a lifetime commitment. As you can see, when a tortoise cannot be
adopted for some reason, the Rescue cares for the tortoise for life.
If you want a pet desert tortoise, DON'T take one out of the desert! Taking
("harassing, harming, pursuing, hunting, shooting, wounding, killing,
trapping, capturing, collecting or attempting to engage is such conduct")
violates the Federal Endangered Species Act and the State of California
Department of Fish and Game regulations. Violating these laws can result in a
substantial fine. There are already many displaced tortoises looking for a good
home. DO call the Joshua Tree Tortoise Rescue for adoption information at
760-369-1235. Licenses, care sheets, and edibles information are available at
the Rescue. If you get tired of a pet desert tortoise, DON'T release it into the
desert! Again, release of a captive tortoise is a violation of the Federal
Endangered Species Act and the State of California Department of Fish and Game
regulations. Violating these laws can result in a substantial fine. Instead,
please call the Rescue at 760-369-1235, and we will find a great home for your
tortoise.
The Joshua Tree Tortoise Rescue is a non-profit organization solely dependent on
private funding for it's work. We are always in need of construction materials,
office supplies, heating pads and hot lamps, and monetary donations to assist in
the purchasing the much-needed medication for tortoise rehabilitation.
If you would like more information on how you can help or for
additional tortoise facts, contact;
Joshua Tree Turtle and Tortoise Rescue
P O Box 1099
Joshua Tree, California 92252
760-369-1235
or e-mail the director, Rae Packard.
If you live in California, and would like to adopt a Desert
Tortoise,
please download the attached FAQ and Adoption
Application and mail back to the Rescue.
View Our News Letter
Visit: www.tortoise.org
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