Harriet
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- For the name, see Harriet (name).
Harriet (c. 1830–June 23, 2006) was a Galápagos tortoise (Geochelone elephantopus porteri) who had an estimated age of 175 years at the time of her death in Australia. Harriet is the second oldest tortoise ever authenticated, the oldest being Tu'i Malila, who died in 1965 at the age of 188.
She was reportedly collected by Charles Darwin himself during his 1835 visit to the Galápagos Islands as part of his round-the-world survey expedition, transported to England, and then brought to her final home, Australia, by a retiring captain of the Beagle. However, some doubt was cast on this story by the fact that Darwin had never visited the island that Harriet originally came from.
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[edit] Detective work
What was known up until about 1994 was that Harriet had been at the Brisbane Botanic Gardens for many years, as was documented by David Fleay in his books Talking of Animals (1956) and Living with Animals (1960). Fleay had first met Harriet in 1936 and had evidence that she had been at the Botanic Gardens since 1870. She went to Fleay's Fauna Reserve in 1952 after the zoo at the Gardens closed. Here she stayed until 1987 when legislation changes meant that Fleay's could no longer keep exotic animals, so she was moved to Australia Zoo, then owned by The Crocodile Hunter's Steve Irwin, where she lived out the remainder of her life.
In August 1994, a historian from Mareeba published a letter in the local newspaper about two tortoises he remembered at the Botanic Gardens in 1922 and that the keepers of the time were saying that the tortoises had arrived at the Gardens in 1860 as a donation from John Clements Wickham who was the First Lieutenant (and later Captain) of HMS Beagle under Fitzroy during the voyage of the Beagle in 1835.
Wickham actually brought three tortoises to Australia when he arrived after retiring from the Royal Navy in 1841; these lived at Newstead House from 1841 to 1860. Records show that the tortoises were donated to the Botanic Gardens in 1860 when Wickham retired as Government Resident of Moreton Bay (now Brisbane) and left Australia for Paris.
There is evidence from letters that Charles Darwin was well aware that Wickham had these tortoises, as he sent a letter to Huxley in 1860 informing him that he should speak with Wickham in Paris about the last of the tortoises from the 1835 expedition as he had them. Hence the evidence that the three tortoises at the Brisbane Botanic Gardens were genuinely collected by Darwin is actually quite strong.
[edit] Harriet's subspecies
That the subspecies Harriet represents was not from one of the islands visited by Darwin is not actually problematic. Darwin definitely collected tortoises on San Cristobal, San Salvadore, and Santa Maria; however, the subspecies on Santa Maria (G. n. nigra) was in fact already extinct when Darwin visited the islands, having been killed and eaten by prisoners on the prison colony there. Yet Darwin still collected tortoises on Santa Maria: the tortoises he found had been retrieved by the prisoners from other islands for food and Darwin collected some of these before they reached the stewpot. Hence they were a mixture of subspecies from a number of islands. Harriet, as a G. n. porteri, is from Santa Cruz. One of the other tortoises (Tom) is still in the Queensland Museum and has been identified as a G. n. chathamensis (from San Cristobal): this subspecies went extinct in 1906 in the wild and by the time Tom died in 1942 he was the last surviving specimen of the subspecies.
[edit] Other theories about Harriet
An initial analysis of Harriet's DNA was unable to identify her subspecies in a cross section of 900 animals representing 26 extant and extinct populations. After reanalysis she was assigned to G. n. porteri. However, her genetic diversity and other factors in her DNA sequence data indicated she was most likely at least two generations removed from the oldest specimens of her subspecies in the dataset. The oldest G. n. porteri in the dataset were collected as adults in 1907 and hence this would place Harriet as having to be alive by 1860.
This dating rules out many alternate possibilities for Harriet, as prior to 1900 Australia was a very difficult place to get to. There were only two imports of Galápagos tortoises prior to 1900 and 4 of the 5 animals involved have been accounted for and are still represented by museum material. The suggestion in some quarters that Harriet was collected by whalers and brought to Australia is not possible, as Australia had its own whaling industry and whaling ships from South America did not visit Australia.
The tortoises collected by Darwin were all recorded in Fitzroy's journals of the voyage including their measurements. As they averaged 11" in length and this represented an approximate age of 5 years for the subspecies Harriet's year of birth was estimated by Scott Thomson to 1830 with an error of 2 years either way in the 1995 paper describing the events of Harriet's life, and the results of the research.
[edit] Later life
Harriet was thought to be a male for many years and was actually named Harry after Harry Oakman, the curator of the zoo at the Brisbane Botanic Gardens, but this was corrected in the 1960s by a visiting biologist. (As it happens, Tom, the specimen in the Queensland Museum, is also a female.)
On November 15, 2005, her much publicized 175th birthday was celebrated at the Australia Zoo. This event was attended by Scott Thomson (the researcher on Harriet's history), three generations of the Fleay family, Robin Stewart (author of Darwin's Tortoise), and many hundreds of others who knew this tortoise during the latter part of her long voyage through time.
Harriet died in her enclosure on June 23, 2006 of heart failure following a short illness.
[edit] Character
Harriet was said to be very good-natured. She loved the attention of men and enjoyed when people patted her on the scute. Harriet spent a majority of her day napping at her home pond. Her favourite food was hibiscus flowers.
[edit] Timeline for Harriet
(see Thomson, Irwin and Irwin (1995))
- ca. 1830 – 1834: Harriet hatches, probably on Isla Santiago (known at the time as James Island).
- 1835: Harriet is probably collected by Charles Darwin and taken to England.
- 1841: Wickham retires from the Royal Navy, moves to Australia and brings three tortoises with him. Lives at Newstead House.
- 1859: First publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species.
- ca. 1860: Probable time when the three tortoises are placed in the Brisbane Botanical Gardens as Wickham soon left Australia for France.
- ca. 1870: The earliest first-hand account of Harriet.
- 1882: Charles Darwin dies.
- 1942: Tom – one of the original three tortoises – dies, and is placed in the Queensland Museum.
- 1952: Harriet moves to Fleay’s Fauna Sanctuary.
- 1987: Harriet moves to the Queensland Reptile Park (Australia Zoo).
- 1995: Harriet's remarkable history and the results of the research are presented.
- 2005: Harriet's 175th birthday is attended by many people who had a long association with her.
- 2006: On June 23, Harriet dies of heart failure at Australia Zoo.
[edit] External links
- Australia Zoo
- Darwin's Dinner Plate
- Harriet finally withdraws after 176 years - Sydney Morning Herald, Friday, 23 June 2006
- BBC News: Zoo celebrates Harriet the tortoise's 175th birthday
- ABC News: Harriet Dies
- Harriet the Tortoise dies at 175 - BBC News, Friday, 23 June 2006
- Story at NEWS.com.au
- Story at Mirror.co.uk with Harriet timeline
- Carettochelys.com: Author's Link of the original papers discussing Harriets history