Air Cargo Management

Tortoise travel: Air France KLM Martinair Cargo transports endangered species from museum to the wild

photo_camera Dans le cadre d’un programme de renforcement des populations locales, l’Institut océanographique de Monaco transfère 46 tortues sillonnées au Sénégal. Ce samedi 10 décembre, 46 tortues juvéniles ont quitté le Musée océanographique de Monaco pour rejoindre le Village des Tortues de Noflaye, au Sénégal, dans le cadre d’un projet de renforcement des populations. Cette première étape, qui s’inscrit dans un programme d’une durée de 3 ans, s’est déroulée en présence et avec la participation de LL.AA.SS. le Prince Albert II et la Princesse Charlène de Monaco, accompagnés de Leurs enfants, LL.AA.SS. le Prince Héréditaire Jacques et la Princesse Gabriella

Air France KLM Martinair Cargo has transported 46 juvenile tortoises to Senegal as part of a population reinforcement project.

The company worked with the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco for the transfer, which is one phase of a three-year programme.

Since 2012, the museum has been home to several African spurred tortoises (Centrochelys sulcata), the third largest land tortoise in the world. These herbivorous reptiles, from a breeding centre in Mali, were entrusted to Robert Calcagno, director-general of the Oceanographic Institute of Monaco, in order to educate visitors about the need to protect this endangered species.

“Protecting animal species, both on land and at sea, and making them known to the general public is a major challenge for the future,” said Calcagno. “By housing these spurred tortoises, now an endangered species, we have allowed them to reproduce while raising awareness among visitors of the need to protect them. The logical outcome was to work to boost the local wild populations.”

Air France KLM Martinair Cargo facilitated the tortoises’ journey from Monaco to Dakar via its hub at Paris Charles de Gaulle airport. The programme includes management of the tortoises in quarantine within the Centre for the Protection of Turtles in Senegal – Village des Tortues, their introduction into the Koyli Alpha Nature Reserve in the northwest of the country, and their monitoring for a two-year period.

Six crates were specially designed to transport the 46 tortoises from Air France KLM Martinair Cargo’s hub in Paris to Dakar on 12 December.

“Air France KLM Martinair Cargo is very sensitive to the protection of the environment and the preservation of endangered species,” said Air France KLM Martinair Cargo’s vice president product & verticals Mathieu Fleisch. “We were therefore delighted to join the Oceanographic Institute of Monaco in transferring the 46 African spurred tortoises to Senegal. We were proud to make our extensive network and our recognised expertise in the transport of live animals available for this operation.”

The tortoises have been placed in an observation enclosure for six months, located in Le Village des Tortues in Noflaye, a conservation centre housed in the heart of a special botanical reserve.

At the end of the quarantine phase, the juveniles will be transferred to a fenced-off part of the reserve for one year so that they can acclimatise to living conditions in the wild. They will then be released in the reserve managed by the association, in accordance with the recommendations and directives of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) within the framework of wildlife reintroduction operations.

The tortoises will be monitored regularly by trained staff, who will analyse their growth and adaptation to the reserve. During this monitoring period, several education and awareness-raising campaigns will also be undertaken to involve local communities in the conservation project. “As with all our projects, beyond the biological objectives, we seek to raise public awareness of the causes we defend. Here, children from local communities will be trained and involved in the project,” said Olivier Brunel, project manager for the operation.

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