After more than a century of munching on her favorite foods of romaine lettuce and cactus fruit, beloved Galápagos tortoise Gramma, the oldest resident of the San Diego Zoo, has died. Gramma was born in her native habitat and was estimated to be about 141 years old, zoo officials said. She died Nov. 20.It’s not clear exactly when the tortoise arrived at the zoo, but its officials said she came from the Bronx Zoo in either 1928 or 1931 as part of their first group of Galápagos tortoises. As the world changed around her, she delighted visitors with her sweet, shy personality. She lived through two world wars, 20 U.S. presidents and two pandemics. Her care specialists affectionately called her “the Queen of the Zoo.” She was suffering from bone conditions related to her old age that progressed recently before she was euthanized, the zoo said.”Caring for such a remarkable tortoise was a privilege,” the zoo added. Many visitors commented on social media about getting to first visit Gramma when they were young and being able to come back years later with their kids. Cristina Park, 69, said one of her earliest memories from her childhood was going to the San Diego Zoo when she was 3 or 4 years old and riding on the back of a tortoise. That’s no longer allowed, but the experience inspired her to keep a small desert tortoise as a pet and learn more about tortoise conservation. “Just how amazing it is that they managed to live through so much,” Park said. “And yet they’re still there.” Galapagos tortoises can live for over 100 years in the wild and close to double that in captivity. The oldest known Galapagos tortoise was named Harriet, who lived at the Australia Zoo until the age of 175. She was collected from the Galapagos Islands in 1835, when she was just the size of a dinner plate, according to the zoo. This means she hatched somewhere around 1830, and she died in 2006. Galápagos tortoises include 15 subspecies of tortoises from the islands, three of which were deemed extinct. The rest are all vulnerable or critically endangered, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Concerted efforts have been made to breed these tortoises in captivity over the past several decades, with more than 10,000 juveniles released to the wild since 1965, according to the Galápagos Conservancy. Some subspecies have been brought back from the brink of extinction. In April, four Galápagos tortoises were born at the Philadelphia Zoo to first-time parents that were roughly 100 years old, a first in the zoo’s history. In June, Zoo Miami resident and Galápagos tortoise Goliath became a first-time father at the age of 135.
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