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Giant tortoise celebrates his 135th birthday - and first Father's Day
Giant tortoise celebrates his 135th birthday - and first Father's Day

The Independent

time7 days ago

  • Science
  • The Independent

Giant tortoise celebrates his 135th birthday - and first Father's Day

A giant Galapagos tortoise has turned 135 – and he's also just become a father for the first time, says Miami Zoo officials. Despite multiple breeding attempts throughout his lifetime, Goliath never successfully fathered any offspring. This all changed with a recent unexpected surprise. After 128 days of incubation, one egg out of a clutch of eight that was laid on January 27 successfully hatched on June 4. 'The hatchling appears to be healthy and has been removed from the incubator and placed in a separate enclosure where it is active and full of energy,' the zoo said. 'Goliath' hatched on the island of Santa Cruz in the Galapagos on June 15, 1890, and later moved to the Bronx Zoo in July 1929. Ultimately, he settled at the Miami Zoo in July 1981. Miami zoo officials are anticipating a possible world record and applied to the Guinness Book of World Records to get Goliath the recognition he deserves as 'The oldest first-time father in history!' 'Not only is this the first offspring for Goliath, but it is also the first time in the history of Zoo Miami that a Galapagos tortoise has hatched, making this a historic event on multiple levels!' Miami Zoo said Friday. Galapagos Tortoises can live for over 100 years in captivity, as research has found that they possess multiple gene variants linked to DNA repair, immune response, and cancer suppression. The mother of the tortoise hatchling is also pushing record numbers, with an age between 85 and 100 years old. 'Sweet Pea' arrived at the Crandon Park Zoo on Key Biscayne, Florida, as an adult in 1960. The reptile pair share a combined age of over 200 and may qualify as 'The oldest first-time parents in history,' the zoo said. 'Both Goliath and Sweet Pea are doing well in their public habitat and are not aware of their newly hatched offspring,' the statement added. According to the Guinness Book of World Records, a Seychelles giant tortoise is the oldest living tortoise, at 191 years of age. The tortoise, named Jonathan, lives on the remote South Atlantic island of St. Helena.

Voices: On discovering the real sex of my owl, I began to hatch a plan
Voices: On discovering the real sex of my owl, I began to hatch a plan

Yahoo

time30-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Voices: On discovering the real sex of my owl, I began to hatch a plan

THE EGG Lists of concerns that concern me, litter my head on waking, Shuffling their order of importance and urgency. Some things remain undone And it becomes their natural state over time, as they fossilize. Notes of ideas for books from 2010 are heaped in my study as evidence Of my ideas back then. Paintings remain unhung, Being constantly pushed aside by the here and now actions I make daily. And then there's the egg in the incubator: It may have an owl in it. For six years its mother kept her secret So well that I called her Oscar. Her certificate did not sex her. Out of three, she broke two: I feel fated to hatch one If it doesn't die in the shell as a swirling mess of Eurasian owl abstractions And the beginnings of soft bone, or collapse after hatching Like a deflating toy, unable to retain air, tired of life before living it. And then all the urgencies, demands, and other obligations, The arrangements, invitations and social gatherings, Will cease to matter as I devote my waking hours To the upkeep of this one perfect being, whose needs Will outstrip everything as it doubles in size every three days, Becoming beak and claws, with eyes as big as gobstoppers And the cry of an owl child.

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