Egyptian Tortoise
🔤 Taxonomy
Testudo kleinmanni is the currently accepted scientific name. Older material may separate Israeli/Negev animals as Testudo werneri; check current paperwork and locality data rather than assuming old names are interchangeable.
Common names used in the hobby:
- Egyptian tortoise
- Kleinmann’s tortoise
📌 Description
A very small, arid-land tortoise from North Africa that needs bright UVB, careful heat control, dry housing, and strict legal paperwork.
Adult size is usually 10-13 cm, with adult weight around 200-500 g and a potential lifespan of 30-70 years. Plan the adult enclosure before purchase, not after the juvenile outgrows a starter pen.
🌍 Distribution
Associated with coastal and inland desert-edge habitats of Egypt, Libya, and Israel/Negev records under current broad usage. It uses sparse vegetation, sandy or loamy soils, and short seasonal activity windows. Captive care should offer bright light, a short warm basking period, dry airy footing, deep shaded retreats, and cooler escapes.

🌡 Climate across the native range
Monthly climate normals from reviewed GBIF occurrence locations:
Negev — Israel
| Month | Min °C | Mean °C | Max °C | RH % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 5.8 | 11 | 16.2 | 61 |
| February | 6.6 | 12.1 | 17.5 | 58 |
| March | 8.6 | 14.5 | 20.4 | 54 |
| April | 12 | 18.7 | 25.5 | 44 |
| May | 14.8 | 21.9 | 28.9 | 42 |
| June | 17.6 | 24.6 | 31.6 | 45 |
| July | 19.7 | 26.3 | 33 | 47 |
| August | 19.9 | 26.3 | 32.8 | 51 |
| September | 18.4 | 24.7 | 31 | 54 |
| October | 15.7 | 21.8 | 28 | 54 |
| November | 11 | 16.9 | 22.8 | 55 |
| December | 7.1 | 12.4 | 17.8 | 61 |
Weather data by WorldClim v2.1 · Monthly normals queried by Herpeton Academy from raster values; relative humidity is derived from vapor pressure and mean temperature.
Location references use GBIF.org occurrence data where available; original occurrence records retain their source dataset licenses.
⚖️ Legal status
As of 2026-06-05, this article records the species as CITES Appendix I, EU Annex A, and Bern Convention not relevant. In the EU, Annex A animals can require certificates and marking even when they are captive bred. Do not rely on a seller’s verbal claim. Local ownership, registration, transport, breeding, sale, and import rules may still apply, so keep invoices, breeder details, transfer or import/export documents, and identification photos with the animal’s records.
🤌 Husbandry
Build a dry, bright, low-profile table around precise heat control and hiding depth. Outdoor keeping is only for very controlled dry climates because this small tortoise overheats and chills quickly.
A practical adult starting footprint is about 0.72 m², with a starting footprint around 120 x 60 cm. Larger adults, females, groups, or outdoor housing need more space and duplicate basking, feeding, and retreat options where relevant.
💡 Lighting
Use a clear 10-12 hour day-night cycle, bright visible light, and measured UVB. Plan UVB around Ferguson Zone 3 at the basking area, with shaded retreats close enough for the tortoise to leave the light.
Indoor animals need a reliable UVB lamp or regular safe outdoor sunlight. Glass and most plastics block useful UVB, so measure the real UVI at shell height.
🌡 Heating and temperature
Typical structured targets are:
- ambient air: 24-30°C
- basking surface: 32-35°C
- cool retreat: 20-24°C
- night: 18-22°C
Use thermostats, separate thermometers, and surface-temperature checks. Heat should create a usable gradient, not one uniform hot box.
💧 Humidity and water
Structured humidity target: 30-50%. Short local access around 50-65% may support hydration, skin, or nesting needs, but the whole enclosure should not become stagnant.
Keep the main enclosure dry and well ventilated, with a slightly more humid deeper refuge for hydration balance. Fresh drinking water and supervised short soaks can be useful, but persistent dampness means the setup is wrong.
🌿 Enclosure and decoration
Use a broad open-topped tortoise table or secure dry-season pen with firm sandy loam or soil-sand substrate. Avoid dusty pure sand, bark chips, slick floors, and loose bedding that stays cold and wet. Provide several low hides at different temperatures.
🥬 Feeding
Feed varied weeds, flowers, grasses, and fibrous leafy greens. Avoid fruit, dog food, high-protein diets, and pellets as staples. Small portions matter; monitor weight, shell growth, and hydration.
🥚 Breeding
This is an oviparous species. Typical clutch size is about 1-4 eggs, with incubation around 29-31°C for about 80-120 days.
Do not force cold brumation. Seasonal management should use modest photoperiod, food, and daily temperature changes unless veterinary and locality information supports more.
🩺 Common problems
Main risks are overheating, damp stagnant air, respiratory disease, dehydration, weak UVB, rich grocery diets, pyramiding from poor growth management, and illegal or wild-caught origin.
Quarantine new animals, record weights, and use an experienced reptile veterinarian for nasal discharge, wheezing, swollen eyes, injuries, persistent refusal to eat, shell softness, diarrhea, or sustained weight loss.
📌 Conclusion
The Egyptian tortoise is a conservation-sensitive specialist for keepers who can keep conditions dry, bright, legal, and carefully measured. It is small enough to tempt impulse buyers, but it has less margin for husbandry errors than many larger tortoises.
📚 Sources and further reading
Key sources checked for this revision:
- CITES Appendices
- Checklist of CITES Species
- European Commission wildlife trade overview
- EAZA Best Practice Guidelines for Testudo kleinmanni
- GBIF Backbone Taxonomy
- WorldClim v2.1