A three-legged tortoise from “the world’s rarest” species has settled into his new life at the Chester Zoo in England after rescuers saved him from a smuggler in Hong Kong.
According to a release from the U.K. zoo, customs officials seized the ploughshare tortoise, named Hope, from his trafficker in 2019 after they found the trader traveling from the Comoro Islands off the coast of East Africa with a suitcase hiding 57 live and endangered tortoises. The trafficker later served a two-year jail sentence after being convicted under Hong Kong’s animal protection laws.
After his rescue, Hope was transported to Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden Wild Animal Rescue Centre in Hong Kong to receive proper care from conservationists. There, veterinarians discovered Hope was missing a front leg and claws on a hind leg.
Courtesy Chester Zoo

To help him get around and achieve better balance, the experts at the Hong Kong facility provided Hope with three support rollers under his lower shell. The tortoise’s former caretakers also modified the wheels to increase their function before sending the animal to the Chester Zoo.

As he embarks on his new life in the U.K., Hope is now part of a European conservation-breeding program created to battle the extinction of his species.
Dr. Gerardo Garcia, the curator of lower vertebrates and invertebrates at the Chester Zoo, said in a statement that Hope " is an incredibly special tortoise, for many reasons."

He continued, “In addition Hope has a remarkable life story, having been rescued from smugglers, discovered to have a missing leg and then having a prosthetic mobility support specially fitted to help him get around.”
“It works wonderfully well — he moves even quicker than his three neighbors,” Garcia added. “He’s settling in nicely to his new home and hopefully, in several years' time once he’s more developed, he’ll go on to produce offspring and contribute to the survival of the species thanks to the vital insurance population in conservation zoos.”
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As part of vital conservation breeding programs, only 63 ploughshare tortoises are allowed to live legally outside of Madagascar, including at the Chester Zoo, which currently houses four of the creatures.
Due to their distinctive gold and black shells and rarity, the tortoises are highly-prized in the black market trade.
Chester Zoo’s director of animals and plants, Mike Jordan, shared in a statement, “This is a species that’s sadly under huge pressure for its survival and there’s a very real possibility that this species could be lost forever.”
source: people.com