The Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum established the Tortoise Adoption Program (TAP) to support the welfare of both captive and wild desert tortoises. The program is sanctioned by the Arizona Game and Fish Department and helps place unwanted or surplus tortoises with qualified private custodians.
TAP focuses exclusively on the Sonoran Desert Tortoise (Gopherus morafkai) within the Tucson area, which lies within the species’ natural range. Other turtles and tortoises that are occasionally accepted by Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum are referred to the Department of Herpetology, as they fall outside TAP’s scope.
Adopted tortoises remain the property of the State of Arizona. Private individuals become custodians, not owners. Only tortoises in apparent good health are placed; animals suffering from illness or malnutrition are held for rehabilitation. Adoptions take place between April 1 and September 30 each year.
In addition to facilitating adoptions, the program emphasizes the preservation of wild populations. It provides guidance on proper care and husbandry of captive tortoises through phone support (520-883-3062), pamphlets, and this website.
Many private individuals living within desert tortoise ranges historically kept tortoises as informal pets. Often, these captive tortoises are later released into the wild. Unfortunately, they lack critical survival skills, struggling to find food, avoid predators, and cope with desert conditions, resulting in suffering and early death.
Captive tortoises frequently do not receive proper veterinary screening, making them susceptible to pathogens. When released, they can introduce and spread diseases among wild tortoise populations, with potentially devastating consequences.
Arizona is home to two distinct species of desert tortoise: the Sonoran Desert Tortoise (Gopherus morafkai) and the Mojave Desert Tortoise (Gopherus agassizii). Many captive tortoises lack documented locality data, so when privately kept individuals are accidentally released, there's a risk of intermixing these species, undermining natural speciation patterns.
First read all the information on the care of the desert tortoise on this website, including the appendices. Also look at the pictures of the burrow under construction.
Decide if you are comfortable with the requirements for tortoise care and the adjustments you may have to make to your yard. For example, if you have dogs, can they be kept separate?
If you wish to proceed, prepare your yard for the tortoise, and either take advantage of the AZGFD online application process — Tucson area requests will be forwarded to us, or you can follow our process below: