
Keith Crawford of Ecological Consulting Solutions, Inc., holds a juvenile gopher tortoise saved a site soon to be developed in Polk County near Davenport on Friday, June 3, 2022. - Patrick Connolly/Orlando Sentinel/TNS
ORLANDO, Fla. -- Though gopher tortoises have persisted for millions of years, they now face a barrage of threats from loss of habitat and developers with permits that allow the reptiles to be buried alive. From 1991-2007, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission issued incidental take permits (ITPs) allowing land owners to pay a fee that would allow them to legally “take” tortoises. Though developers could relocate tortoises on-site, many were buried alive in their burrows underneath homes or roadways, forced to endure a slow, painful death. Though new permits aren’t being issued by ...





