Skip to content

Join us for Turtle Month!

Turtle Month 2025
  • Turtle Survival Center
  • Annual Symposium 2025
  • News & Events
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
  • Turtle Survival Center
  • Annual Symposium 2025
  • News & Events
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • What We Do
  • What You Can do
Donate
  • About Us
    • Who We Are
    • Staff & Board
    • Publications
    • Financials & Policies
    • Strategic Plan 2025
    • Contact Us
  • What We Do
    • Turtle Survival Center
    • Global Projects
    • Volunteer Science
    • Confiscation to Conservation
    • Annual Symposium 2025
    • News & Events
  • What You Can Do
    • Explore Turtles & Tortoises Around the World
    • Virtual Outreach Experience
    • Donate
    • Become a Member
    • Corporate Partnership
    • Drink Beer. Save Turtles.®
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
    • Who We Are
    • Staff & Board
    • Publications
    • Financials & Policies
    • Strategic Plan 2025
    • Contact Us
  • What We Do
    • Turtle Survival Center
    • Global Projects
    • Volunteer Science
    • Confiscation to Conservation
    • Annual Symposium 2025
    • News & Events
  • What You Can Do
    • Explore Turtles & Tortoises Around the World
    • Virtual Outreach Experience
    • Donate
    • Become a Member
    • Corporate Partnership
    • Drink Beer. Save Turtles.®
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
  • Who We Are
  • Staff & Board
  • Publications
  • Financials & Policies
  • Strategic Plan 2025
  • Contact Us
  • Careers

Why Turtles?

Found around the world in rivers, deserts, jungles, and our own backyards, it’s easy to assume tortoises and freshwater turtles will always be here. But the very traits that once helped them survive render them vulnerable to extinction today.
Support Our Work

Our Initiatives

  • Turtle Survival Center
  • Global Projects
  • Volunteer Science
  • Confiscation to Conservation
  • Annual Symposium

Our Programs

Protecting the world’s most endangered tortoises and freshwater turtles

We All Play a Role.

To save turtles, we all play a role. Every day, tortoises and freshwater turtles around the globe face pressing threats. Your support equips us to support species where and how they need us most.

Turtles are ancient and remarkable creatures who deserve a champion. When you stand with us, you help ensure their continued survival. Together, we can create a world with zero turtle extinctions.

Support Our Work

Learn & Discover

  • Explore Turtles & Tortoises Around the World
  • Virtual Outreach Experience

Make an Impact

  • Donate
  • Become a Member
  • Corporate Partnership
  • Drink Beer. Save Turtles®

News & Events

One Thousand More Out The Door

  • November 2, 2023

Notes from the Field in Madagascar

By Brett Bartek

In January of this year, 1,000 Radiated Tortoises were moved from Turtle Survival Alliance’s two conservation centers in southern Madagascar to a pre-release pen located deep in a community-protected forest in the Androy region. This forest is the second site that was chosen by the Turtle Survival Alliance Madagascar team as an appropriate place to release tortoises that were rescued from poachers. Turtle Survival Alliance staff has been working with this community for over a year to build a solid relationship in order to ensure that the tortoises, and their forest, will remain protected for the long term.

This July, I traveled back to the forest to assist Turtle Survival Alliance staff in releasing these 1,000 tortoises from the pre-release pen. This being only our second time releasing these rescued tortoises, we wanted to continue our monitoring efforts to ensure our methods were successful. Ideally, the released tortoises would settle into a natural home range and movement pattern within the first couple months of release and not leave the protected forest.

A Turtle Survival Alliance team member in the field safely denotes with a marker a Radiated Tortoise that has received its health evaluation.

Our first two days of work included performing health evaluations on 300 random tortoises in the pen to determine how they fared over the last seven months. We changed things up since the last time and increased the size of the pre-release pen to eight hectares (almost 20 acres) over the six hectares (almost 15 acres) at the previous release site. The change was noticeable after seven months, with tortoises being harder to find in the larger pen and feeling much heavier at the end of the penning period. Just like at our last site, we attached GPS loggers and radio transmitters to 15 of the translocated tortoises and five resident tortoises for monitoring and comparison.

A Baobab tree in Madagascar. The Baobab is an icon of the spiny forests of southern Madagascar where the Radiated Tortoise calls home.

The spiny forest is much denser at this site. I could barely take a step without being grabbed, poked, or stabbed by the wide variety of vegetation that has evolved some serious self defense mechanisms. During these first two days of work I was reminded about how important these forests are to the communities surrounding them. I lost track of our community guides while we were working on a small group of tortoises. After a few minutes, I looked up and saw them walking back to us from the dense forest with something in their hands. They had collected a couple of large wood boring beetles that were going to be on the lunch menu a little later in the day. They were similar in size and shape to the ones I had seen in the cottonwood trees while working in Oklahoma, but were much more brightly patterned and colored with large spines covering various parts of the insects body. I was offered a taste, but politely declined, as the beans and rice were a little more familiar to me.

A Radiated Tortoise with a GPS logging unit affixed to its shell to track its movements.
A Radiated Tortoise with a radio transmitter and GPS logging unit. Data collected by the GPS units demonstrates how the tortoises use the forest following their release, while the radio transmitter allows our research team to actively locate the tortoises.

July is a winter month in the Southern Hemisphere. Temperatures during this time of the year dip into the low 50s (Fahrenheit) at night and might hover in the high 80s (Fahrenheit) during the day, very similar to the southern Florida winters I’m used to. This is also the dry season in this part of the world. Vegetation that the tortoises might forage upon is few and far between, and as such, this is also the inactive season for the tortoises, with some only moving a few meters per day. The weather and the inactive tortoises makes work in the pen move pretty smoothly, if you don’t count the hostile vegetation. After finally opening the pen, we tracked the tortoises using radio telemetry for two days and confirmed that they were not moving very much, with only one of the 15 tortoises leaving the pen. 

After completing our mission at our second site, we headed back to the Tortoise Conservation Centre (TCC) to gear up for the next and final part of our mission. In the evening I was able to take a walk around the TCC and observe the tortoises that are being housed there. Crested Drongos, Coucals, and Souimanga Sunbirds were moving throughout the native spiny forest. A troop of Ring-tailed Lemurs made their way through the tortoise pens, stealing some of the sweet potato leaves that the tortoises were not interested in eating on this cold afternoon. This walk is always a sobering one as the scope of the problem we are combating becomes immediately evident by the 10,000 tortoises waiting to be released back into the wild where they were born.

Radiated Tortoises in groups of five soak in shallow water to hydrate them prior to release into the spiny forest.

The next morning, a little over 300 Radiated Tortoises were loaded up into trucks, and the team drove them to our first release site, where two new four-hectare (almost 10-acre) pens were constructed in the forest waiting for them. When we arrived at the site we met with the community leaders to discuss the plan and what everyone’s role would be. We all drove down to the pen, and one by one, we started pulling groups of tortoises out of the trucks and placing them in large bowls of water to allow them to drink for a few minutes before finally releasing them into the pen. This routine happened two more times over the next two days, with us placing 500 tortoises in each pen—one thousand more tortoises ready for release.

Brett Bartek holds a Radiated Tortoise affixed with a GPS logging unit and radio transmitter.

I finally started my week-long trip back home, where I had to get used to not speaking in broken French or Malagasy, could take a hot shower just any time I wanted, ate things other than rice, and went back to working in an air-conditioned office. I can’t wait to go back to Madagascar.

All photos courtesy of Brett Bartek.

Image 1: Turtle Survival Alliance team member adheres tracking device to Radiated Tortoise in Madagascar.

About Us
  • Who We Are
  • Staff & Board
  • Publications
  • Financials & Policies
  • Strategic Plan 2025
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
What We Do
  • Turtle Survival Center
  • Madagascar
  • NAFTRG
  • AZA SAFE
  • Annual Symposium 2025
What You Can Do
  • Explore Turtles & Tortoises
  • Virtual Outreach Experience
  • Become a Member
  • Drink Beer. Save Turtles.®
  • News & Events
Donate
Subscribe for Turtle Newsletter
© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved.

Privacy Policy

Subscribe for Turtle News

Subscribe to receive the Turtle Survival Alliance email newsletter and stay up-to-date on the latest in turtle conservation.