Tuataras Breeding Again on Mainland New Zealand

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo

Vicious_Fish

Here fishy fishy fishy...
MFK Member
Mar 9, 2007
9,386
44
75
44
South Central...
Tuataras Breeding Again on Mainland New Zealand

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,445536,00.htmlhttp://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/forums/newthread.php?do=newthread&f=25

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — A rare reptile with lineage dating back to the dinosaur age has been found nesting on the New Zealand mainland for the first time in about 200 years, officials said Friday.
Four leathery, white eggs from an indigenous tuatara were found by staff at the Karori Wildlife Sanctuary in the capital, Wellington, during routine maintenance work Friday, conservation manager Rouen Epson said.
"The nest was uncovered by accident and is the first concrete proof we have that our tuatara are breeding," Epson said. "It suggests that there may be other nests in the sanctuary we don't know of."

Tuatara, dragon-like reptiles that grow to up to 32 inches, are the last descendants of a species that walked the earth with the dinosaurs 225 million years ago, zoologists say.


They have unique characteristics, such as two rows of top teeth closing over one row at the bottom.


They also have a pronounced parietal eye, a light-sensitive pineal gland on the top of the skull. This white patch of skin — called its "third eye" — slowly disappears as they mature.


A native species to New Zealand, tuatara were nearly extinct on the country's three main islands by the late 1700s due to the introduction of predators such as rats. They still live in the wild on 32 small offshore islands cleared of predators.


A population of 70 tuatara was established at the Karori Sanctuary in 2005. Another 130 were released in the sanctuary in 2007.


The sanctuary, a 620-acre wilderness minutes from downtown Wellington, was established to breed native birds, insects and other creatures securely behind a predator-proof fence.


Empson said that the four eggs — the size of pingpong balls — were unearthed Friday but that there were likely more because the average nest contains around ten eggs.


The eggs were immediately covered up again to avoid disturbing incubation.


If all goes well, juvenile tuatara could hatch any time between now and March, she said.
 
Thats amazing ive held a tuatara at a zoo was amazing their so rare i wanted one but illegal i think because their so endangered.
 
SWEET!!!!
 
Actualy they have and probably still are somewere owned privetly. I would absolutley love to keep them:D All native New Zeland fauna and flora as allways fascinated me, its like a peace of the lost antarctic forests of gonduana, so bad almost all of its more impressive fauna like the haast eagle and the giant moa are already extinct by the actions of man kind:(
 
evilxyardxgnome;2371255; said:
Wow they look badass. It is great that they are breeding again. Hopefully they make a return to the point where we can keep them.
I hope so too. I've wanted one for a long time. It's pretty amazing that although they look like a lizard, they are actually a completely different order entirely. It would be another species to put in you will though like some torts and parrots. I just saw a pic of one at a museum that is still reproductively active at 111 years old...
 
MonsterFishKeepers.com