“…Reptilia (now non‐avian reptiles ) are very under‐researched within the animal welfare, ethology, comparative psychology, and zoo‐animal fields (Goulart et al 2009; Hosey & Melfi, 2014), possibly due to lack of funding, lack of interest in, or lack of understanding of these classes of animals (Lambert et al, 2019). Still, there is a small amount of relevant published research on turtles and tortoises, that has been conducted in zoos, other captive settings, and the wild, which may be drawn upon here (Alba et al, 2017; Gaalema & Benboe, 2008; Gerlach et al, 2013; Gutnick et al, 2019; Kashon & Carlson, 2018; Mehrkam & Dorey, 2014; Mueller‐Paul et al, 2014; Passos et al, 2014; Pellitteri‐Rosa et al, 2010; Tetzlaff et al, 2018; Weiss & Wilson, 2003; Wilkinson, 2015; Wilkinson et al, 2010; Wilkinson et al, 2013). Similarly, some reference books on the wild ecology of Aldabra and the Galapagos Islands may provide relevant insights into the life‐history and some expected behavioural characteristics of the tortoises, that is, behaviour that tortoises have been observed performing in the wild (Pritchard, 1996; Stoddart & Westoll, 1979).…”