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LORD CLIVE'S PET DIES IN KOLKATA ZOO

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Times Online March 23, 2006

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2099856,00.html

 

 

Adwaitya, a giant Aldabra tortoise, sleeps inside his cage in Kolkata

zoo (Deshakalyan Chowdhury/AFP/Getty Images)

 

 

 

 

 

Clive of India's tortoise dies, aged 255

By Jenny Booth and agencies

 

 

 

 

 

A tortoise brought as a present for Clive of India had died in a zoo

at the venerable age of 255.

 

 

 

The giant Aldabra tortoise was one of four brought by British seamen

from the Seychelles Islands as gifts to Robert Clive of the British

East India Company. Clive died in 1774.

 

For many years the tortoise had been living in a zoo in the east

Indian city of Kolkata, where it was one of the star attractions. It

died after a string of illnesses, said Subir Chowdhury, the Kolkata

Zoo director.

 

" Adwaitya (The Only One), who delighted the zoo visitors for 131

years, died yesterday morning, " Chowdhury said.

 

" His shell will be preserved in the zoo. All zoo employees are

saddened by his death. "

 

The three other tortoises given as gifts to Clive died soon after they

arrived in Kolkata, formerly known as Calcutta, he said.

 

" Adwaitya spent his early days in Robert Clive's garden, " the

zookeeper said. He was later transferred to the Alipore zoo, located

in the city's southern district, after it opened in 1875.

 

Despite his many years of life, he only became sick eight years ago

when an infection was detected in his legs, Chowdhury said. He was

successfully treated at that time.

 

" Our records show the tortoise was born in 1750, but some have claimed

he was born in 1705, " he said. He added that the zoo will use a

scientific method known as carbon-dating to determine his real age.

 

Adwaitya became ill several months ago after a crack developed around

a wound on his chest, Chowdhury said.

 

The average lifespan of an Aldabra tortoise is well beyond 100 years,

according to the website of the Fort Worth Zoo in Texas.

 

Most of the tortoises are found on Aldabra, an atoll of four large

coral islands in the Indian Ocean. The atoll has been protected from

human influence and is home to some 152,000 giant tortoises, the

world's largest population of the animal, according to the United

Nations world heritage body.

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