The Joshua Tree Tortoise Rescue, is a
chapter of the California Turtle and Tortoise Club (CTTC), a national
501(3)(c) non-profit organization. We are a local grassroots 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 1920s, there were 1000 California desert tortoises 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. DON'T take it home and DON'T
feed it.
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.
For more information
on:
- Tortoise facts
- Membership opportunities
- Volunteering
- How you can help
Please contact the Joshua Tree Tortoise Rescue. We are a non-profit
organization solely dependent on private funding for it 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.
Phone: -760-369-1235
Slow Mail: P.O. Box 1099,
Joshua Tree, California 92252
Email: tortusldy@juno.com