Kakapo
Well-Known Member
NUBIAN FLAPSHELL TURTLE - Cyclanorbis elegans

Photo taken at: Antwerp zoo, Belgium
Short taxonomy: Sauropsida > Chelonia > Trionychidae
Native range: western and central tropical Africa
Ex-situ frequence: Extremely rare
Danger factors: Mining, dams and pool construction, river course channeling, contamination, and heavy harvest of adults and egg for human food.
Other comments: Formerly it has a very wide distribution area, nowadays it's extremely fragmented. It's the most endangered of all the African turtles, and probably only survives now in the far wetlands of White Nile in south Sudan. None wild individual has been found in last 25 years, and very rarely in the last 50 years. The species is not legally protected worldwide, it doesn't occur in any protected area, it lives in area of high politic instability and is almost absent from captivity in ex-situ facilities, so the future of the species is really dark. The individual on the photo already disappeared and no members of this species are left in European zoos, I wonder if any are left in zoos from other continents (any additional info is welcome).

Photo taken at: Antwerp zoo, Belgium
Short taxonomy: Sauropsida > Chelonia > Trionychidae
Native range: western and central tropical Africa
Ex-situ frequence: Extremely rare
Danger factors: Mining, dams and pool construction, river course channeling, contamination, and heavy harvest of adults and egg for human food.
Other comments: Formerly it has a very wide distribution area, nowadays it's extremely fragmented. It's the most endangered of all the African turtles, and probably only survives now in the far wetlands of White Nile in south Sudan. None wild individual has been found in last 25 years, and very rarely in the last 50 years. The species is not legally protected worldwide, it doesn't occur in any protected area, it lives in area of high politic instability and is almost absent from captivity in ex-situ facilities, so the future of the species is really dark. The individual on the photo already disappeared and no members of this species are left in European zoos, I wonder if any are left in zoos from other continents (any additional info is welcome).

























