These tortoises are
critically endangered due to
habitat loss, being poached for food, and being
overexploited in the pet trade. It is listed on
CITES Appendix I, commercial trade in wild-caught specimens is illegal (permitted only in exceptional licensed circumstances). However, due to the poor economic conditions of Madagascar, many of the laws are largely ignored. . No estimates of wild populations are available, but their numbers are declining, and many authorities see the potential for a rapid decline to
extinction in the wild. In the North American studbook, 332 specimens are listed as participating in captive-breeding programs such as the
Species Survival Plan. Captive breeding has shown great promise as in the captive-breeding program for the radiated tortoise at the New York Zoological Society's Wildlife Survival Center. In 2005, the Wildlife Survival Center was closed, and the radiated tortoise captive-breeding program was continued with the inception of the Behler Chelonian Center, the
Turtle Conservancy's southern California conservation breeding center. In March 2013, smugglers were arrested after carrying a single bag containing 21 radiated tortoises and 54
angonoka tortoises (
Astrochelys yniphora) through
Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Thailand. On 20 March 2016, the customs officials at
Mumbai airport seized 146 tortoises from the mishandled baggage of a
Nepal citizen. This bag was said to belong to a transit passenger, who arrived from Madagascar and flew to Kathmandu, leaving this bag behind. Of the 146 tortoises, 139 were radiated tortoises (
Astrochelys radiata) and seven were
Angonoka tortoises (
Astrochelys yniphora). Two radiated tortoises were found dead with broken shells. On 12 June 2016, it was reported that 72 radiated tortoises and six angonoka tortoises had gone missing from a breeding facility in Thailand. On 20 April 2018, more than 10,000 radiated tortoises were found in a home in
Toliara. In total, the house contained 9,888 live radiated tortoises and 180 dead ones. Rescuers transported them to Le Village Des Tortues ("Turtle Village"), a private wildlife rehabilitation facility in
Ifaty, 18 miles north of Toliara. A week after their discovery, 574 tortoises had died from either dehydration or infection. Three suspects (two men and a woman, the owner of the house) were arrested. The men were in the process of burying dead tortoises on the property when the team arrived. ==References==