Southland Museum and Art Gallery Invercargill Tuatarium

Chlidonias

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As there is now a forum specially for the Invercargill Tuatarium but no threads in it, I thought I'd start it off with this one. I don't really know a lot about the place, although I've visited a few times, so most of the info on here is from the internet. It turned out to be surprisingly hard to come up with much of anything about the place as most sites just repeat the same few lines in different ways. There may be some minor mistakes in the following text.

The Southland Museum and Art Gallery in Invercargill was originally part of the Invercargill Athenaeum (the library), and according to records from the 1880s even back then there was a tuatara kept on the premises. The first large dedicated display for tuatara was built as an outdoor exhibit in 1974. Redevelopment of the museum in 1990 also included the construction of a brand new tuatarium, viewable from the inside (entered through the museum) and from the gardens outside (through bullet-proof glass to deter theft).

There are four public terrariums, a large one at either end and two smaller ones in the middle (one for baby tuatara and one for Henry). See the photo gallery for pictures of the tuatarium interior Invercargill Tuatarium » Photo Gallery.

Henry is the oldest resident of the tuatarium, with an estimated age between 120 and 130 years. He was caught in the wild on Stephens Island in Cook Strait and brought to the museum in 1971. The sign on his enclosure says he was hatched "around the end of the 19th century"; other sources say "around 1880". In reality he could be any age from about 70 onwards. Apparently he does not like other tuatara and is therefore housed alone.

Most of the tuatara at the Museum are common tuatara (and all from Stephens Island). Breeding began here in 1985 and over a hundred young have been hatched and reared. There are usually about 50+ tuatara here at any one time; most hatchlings are sent to Peacock Springs in Christchurch for growing-on before being released to the wild on Cook Strait islands. The 2002 Captive Management Plan records the Museum's common tuatara population as 4.3.53. It is surprising how many internet sources state that the Museum is the ONLY facility to breed tuatara -- in fact, it is simply the most successful (by a long shot); many other places in NZ have also bred tuatara, although results are often rather hit and miss.

There are also seven Brothers Island tuatara at the Museum (laparascoped in 2001 as 2.5). These form the only captive potential-breeding group in NZ and one of only two such groups in the world (the other being at San Diego). They were hatched at Victoria University from wild-collected eggs and are now about 15 years old. They haven't bred yet. Whichever of the two places breeds them first will have achieved a world's first captive-breeding.

In 1991 two baby Brothers Island tuatara were stolen from the Museum by notorious wildlife-smuggler Freddie Angel. Originally it was feared that three baby Brothers tuatara and a breeding common tuatara female had been taken but the female and one of the babies were later found in searches of the enclosures. Angel was arrested in January 1992 on charges of trying to post an adult tuatara poached from Stephens Island to the USA (this tuatara is now at Orana Park), and charges were then also laid regarding the Invercargill Museum break-in. At this time he had been to jail on eight previous occasions, including for the instance where he had stolen kea from Christchurch's North Brighton Zoo (the birds were intercepted as they were leaving the country in luggage). His jail term in this case (for the tuatara) was a paltry one year and eleven months. Angel was well-known for some amusingly-ineffectual smuggling attempts, but of course nobody knows how much he got away with over the years. Astonishingly he was regularly granted permits to legally export non-protected wildlife including introduced species such as possums and wallabies to Asia for "pets", as well as the four species of native lizard that were then not protected (common skink, copper skink, common gecko and forest gecko). In an almost farcical manner the lizard exports were inspected by officials the day before shipment and then not again, making it easy to add in whatever reptiles Angel wanted to send out. Angel is now dead, killed in a car crash in the 1990s (I can't remember the exact year).
 
You don't often see news items about the Invercargill tuatarium, but here's one from today. Note that the age of 111 years given is pure guess-work. Henry was caught in the wild in 1971 (or 1970 according to this article) so his age is unknown.
Henry, at 111, becomes a first-time dad - New Zealand, world, sport, business & entertainment news on Stuff.co.nz
Henry, the famous 111-year-old tuatara from Invercargill, has finally become a dad.

Nine of 11 eggs laid by his lover Mildred hatched at the Southland Museum at the weekend, with the remaining two due last night.

The baby tuatara, whose ancestors go back 220 million years, were all running around and doing well, chuffed museum tuatara curator Lindsay Hazley said.

Henry, a resident at the Southland Museum and Art Gallery since 1970, hit the world headlines in March when he finally proved his manhood at age 111. Mildred subsequently laid 12 eggs, with 11 surviving.

Henry had been uninterested in sex for the entire time he had been in captivity. He had been well-known for his aggression and for 15 years was kept in solitary confinement because he did not get on with other tuatara. But after a cancer growth was removed from his bottom he finally got in the mood.

Mr Hazley said he was "over the moon" that Henry had finally become a father.

"After 36 years of looking after Henry I was chuffed about the mating, then the eggs hatched and now, after nurturing them for 223 days, we have got the results.

"I have done lots of eggs before but these are just special because they are Henry's."

He had rushed back from holiday for the births, with museum staff looking after the tuatara in his absence, he said.

"They were rushing around like clucky old midwives."

As for Henry, he didn't have a clue that he had his own children, Mr Hazley said.

"If he saw the babies and they came close they would be lunch."

Henry's newfound confidence means he is now living with three women. He is expected to get cosy with Lucy in April.

Mr Hazley said Henry's babies should be on display at the museum within a week. About the same time, three hours of videotaped coverage of the tuatara hatchings should be available on the museum website Southland Museum and Art Gallery, New Zealand.

There were now 72 tuatara at the museum, including 42 babies, Mr Hazley said.
 
mstickmanp said:
What made them guess that age?

The fact that he uses a walking frame.

:)

Hix
 
maybe they found his birth certificate: "Henry the tuatara born today, 1898, to proud parents Melissa and George Sphenodon". Of course the REAL question is, is his birth day counted from the day the egg was laid or the day he hatched out of it?
 
Southern tuatara eggs may be key - environment | Stuff.co.nz
Tuatara eggs taken from Southland might be the answer to the survival of their species in the wild if research by a Otago University student is successful.

PhD student Anne Besson placed 15 tuatara into small enclosures at Orokonui Ecosanctuary, just north of Dunedin, in March to find out if they could survive in low southern temperatures.

Four of the 15 tuatara hatched from eggs taken from the Southland museum enclosure in 2003, while the rest came from islands near Cook Strait.

After a successful winter, Ms Besson and her colleagues are now looking to the possibility of releasing the more mature of the 15 tuatara into the wider 300ha enclosure at Orokonui in two years.

Southland museum tuatara man Lindsay Hazley said it was an exciting prospect and could potentially ensure the survival and population growth of tuatara in the wild if successful.

Ms Besson's supervisor, associate professor Alison Cree, said the introduction of pests such as rats had limited tuatara habitats. Orokonui's pest-free environment could provide new and safe habitats for tuatara to live in if existing habitats became uninhabitable, she said. Dr Cree predicted possible warmer weather, a rising sea level and droughts could mean tuatara living on small low-lying islands might not be able to stay there much longer, so it was hoped the research would solve that problem.

The tuatara will be released into the wild sanctuary subject to approval of all parties involved.
 
Invercargill Tuatara Getting Frisky - environment | Stuff.co.nz
16 September 2011

Invercargill tuatara, including former "grumpy old bugger" Henry, have been a little too eager with the ladies at the Southland Museum and Art Gallery, creating a slight headache for curator Lindsay Hazley.

Henry has become a father again, with five healthy babies hatched about seven weeks ago. The latest arrivals add to the first surviving six, born three years ago.

While the latest family additions are welcome arrivals, Henry's lust for his "soulmate" Mildred, along with the museum's other tuataras' randy antics, has resulted in the tuatarium almost reaching capacity.

More than 80 tuatara call the museum home.

The museum's tuatara surplus was the result of overcoming captive-breeding problems and the acrylic roof installed about five years ago, which allowed ultraviolet light through, Mr Hazley said.

He said he had been hatching a long-term plan to shift some of the tuatara to predator-free islands in Foveaux Strait.

"In the next year or two we should have a clear direction about what will happen in the south," he said.

Certain elements, such as climate and soil temperature, would need to be checked before sending the tuatara away, he said.

"There's a lot of homework to do. I don't want to just throw them out on an island to die," he said.

Most years he had shipped eggs away for study at Victoria University, and if they got eggs this year they would be shipped to the Otago University.

Invercargill's oldest celebrity, Henry, became a bit of a stud after an operation to remove a cancerous tumour from his private parts caused a "personality transplant".

"After all those years he was such a stroppy, aggressive, angry man and now he's died and gone to heaven and making up for lost time," Mr Hazley said.

As the baby tuatara were hatched naturally, they had a better chance of survival, and while four of them look healthy, "one is a little runty," he said.

Mr Hazley suspects there would have been between 10 and 12 in the clutch, but some may have been dinner for Henry and Mildred.
 
In 1991 two baby Brothers Island tuatara were stolen from the Museum by notorious wildlife-smuggler Freddie Angel.

Has anybody ever been caught trying to smuggle tuataras other than this loser? Is there any kind of tuatara black market within New Zealand with people keeping them as pets illegally?
 
I can't recall any other tuatara smugglers being caught off the top of my head but there must be some (usually the people caught are smuggling out native geckoes). Tuatara are kept illegally overseas, and they turn up on open sale from time to time on websites like kingsnake.com, so (given the rate they mature and breed) there must be quite a few leaving the country every year. It really isn't hard to smuggle reptiles out of NZ, the fines if a person is caught are pathetic, and the profits can be huge. (It has to be said here that the only tuatara held legally outside NZ are in zoos, so any others seen being kept or advertised for sale should be reported to the relevant wildlife authorities). Within NZ there are no doubt a few people keeping tuatara illegally but there are relatively few reptile hobbyists here and they are more interested in exotic species (of which quite a bit of smuggling goes on). A tuatara turned up on the mainland several years ago which was certainly the result of an illegally-kept pet escaping or being released.
 
I can't recall any other tuatara smugglers being caught off the top of my head but there must be some (usually the people caught are smuggling out native geckoes). Tuatara are kept illegally overseas, and they turn up on open sale from time to time on websites like kingsnake.com, so (given the rate they mature and breed) there must be quite a few leaving the country every year. It really isn't hard to smuggle reptiles out of NZ, the fines if a person is caught are pathetic, and the profits can be huge. (It has to be said here that the only tuatara held legally outside NZ are in zoos, so any others seen being kept or advertised for sale should be reported to the relevant wildlife authorities). Within NZ there are no doubt a few people keeping tuatara illegally but there are relatively few reptile hobbyists here and they are more interested in exotic species (of which quite a bit of smuggling goes on). A tuatara turned up on the mainland several years ago which was certainly the result of an illegally-kept pet escaping or being released.

Is there definitely proof that there are tuataras held privately outside NZ? I appreciate the relative ease of animal smuggling, particularly when it comes to lizards, but I would have thought the delicate nature and very different husbandry conditions for what is (to most people) a dull brown lethargic lizard would suggest an unlikely market. I would expect more proof then 'adverts' on a herp website.
 
tetrapod said:
Is there definitely proof that there are tuataras held privately outside NZ? I appreciate the relative ease of animal smuggling, particularly when it comes to lizards, but I would have thought the delicate nature and very different husbandry conditions for what is (to most people) a dull brown lethargic lizard would suggest an unlikely market. I would expect more proof then 'adverts' on a herp website.
some simple Google searches bring up several confirmed cases, eg this 1998 US Fish and Wildlife Service case (PROBE OF INTERNATIONAL REPTILE TRADE ENDS WITH KEY ARRESTS) involves the smuggling of many protected species including tuatara (price US$30,000) into the USA and other countries; and the 2003 TRAFFIC report on the live reptile trade in the EU puts the price of smuggled tuatara at about 16,000 to 33,500 Euros (the emphasis in the report is on Germany which has a huge reptile market, and it is perhaps significant that most of the recent interceptions of geckoes being smuggled out of NZ involved Germans). There's loads more if you care to search.

Tuatara aren't actually delicate at all so long as they are kept at the appropriate (low) temperatures - in fact they're as tough as old boots - but they are hard to breed, and while to most people they are indeed little more than a big lizard I'm sure you're aware of how obsessive reptile enthusiasts can be in collecting rare and unusual specimens (especially those who have lots of money to spend!).
 
Henry the tuatara has offspring for the third time (the previous two times are referenced in the articles earlier in this thread)
Henry builds up 'tuatara surplus' | Stuff.co.nz
15 March 2012

The Southland Museum and Art Gallery's resident ladies' man, Henry the tuatara, has become a father for a third time but curator Lindsay Hazley says he needs to slow down on the love-making.

Henry's girlfriend Mildred laid 16 eggs more than 200 days ago but only three were fertilised – with one hatching last week and two on Monday.

The three new healthy babies add to five hatched last year and six three years ago.

After being celibate for 38 years Henry had an operation to remove a cancerous tumour from his private parts.

The result of this was a happy, friendly tuatara with three girlfriends who did not seem to be slowing down any time soon.

"We need to convince Henry it's about the quality, not about quantity," Mr Hazley said.

The museum's tuatara surplus was the result of mastering captive-breeding problems and an acrylic roof installed about five years ago.

It was proving a struggle to keep tabs on the reptiles after the museum had reached capacity with 90 tuatara, he said.

"I'm not complaining though, I enjoy it. We're coping," he said.

He would not struggle next year as half of them could be transported to mainland sanctuaries, he said. About 30 or 40 tuatara would be taken to either Orokonui, Young Nicks Head or Cape Kidnappers, he said.
 
Fears Henry The Tuatara Might Be Infertile | Stuff.co.nz
1 Feb 2013

Legendary lothario Henry the tuatara may be firing blanks.

Henry, believed about 116, has spent much of his life celibate after suffering from a cancerous growth in his nether regions for years but, once the growth was removed about five years ago, he hit the breeding scene with a vengeance, siring at least 14 babies.

However, tuatarium staff are worried he has become infertile.

Southland Museum and Art Gallery tuatara curator Lindsay Hazley was concerned about Henry's fertility after evidence the tuatara may not have "enough ammunition to go around".

Henry's girlfriends, Lucy, Mildred and Juliet, had laid 30 eggs after spending time with their main man, but only a couple from his first date were fertilised.

With little research to go on, staff were not sure whether the deficiency was because of Henry's old age, his active lothario lifestyle or an unrelated medical problem.

"They don't know anything about how long tuataras are fertile for. It's quite a learning curve."

Hoping to contribute to reptile research and help Henry, Mr Hazley collected sperm samples from the museum's male tuatara. While most samples appeared healthy under the microscope, Henry's looked in "bits and pieces".

Mr Hazley said the samples had gone to University of Auckland, where Dr Patrick Casey, a "sperm expert", would analyse them.

Meanwhile, the other tuatara at the museum were seeking shelter as, "unlike snakes and lizards, they do not like excessive heat"."

The reptiles had been lurking in the shade of their burrows, because if their body temperatures reached 25 degrees Celsius, they risked death, Mr Hazley said.

Prolonged exposure to heat weakened their immune systems, allowing fungi in the soil to slip in under their scales and infect the blood stream
 
Maybe they can give Henry Viagra in a little tuatara-sized pill.

UPDATE: Oops, just realized that it's not that kind of problem after actually reading the article. It sounds like he is still doing well with the ladies, just not fertile. At least he's still having fun at 116 - should that we all could have such a long and happy life.
 
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The new Tuatarium is now open to the public in Queens Park. The old enclosure (at the nearby Southland Museum and Art Gallery) was technically closed for some years because the building was off-limits due to earthquake risk, but there was viewing still through the outside windows. That original enclosure has now been demolished. There is a photo of the new enclosure's interior on the link.

https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national...display-again-as-new-enclosure-unveiled-named
 
I know the species have been lumped, but I'm curious if this was ever confirmed?

~Thylo
Sadly, it does not appear to have been. The last public news about these baby Tuatara was that a fifth one was found within the museum enclosure site before the enclosure was completely demolished, and that the first four baby Tuatara were being temporarily held at the Queens Park Tuatarium (which reportedly did not have sufficient room to raise these babies in the long term).
 
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