<p class="title">Russian border guards have seized more than 4,000 endangered wild tortoises after they were smuggled out of Kazakhstan, officials said.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Traffickers drove the 4,100 Central Asian tortoises, which are classed as globally vulnerable, across the border into Russia's Orenburg region in a trailer where they were disguised as cabbages, the interior ministry said Tuesday.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Their market value was estimated at 7.8 million rubles (about $117,000).</p>.<p class="bodytext">Investigators placed the reptiles under the care of a college in Orenburg, where students and staff fed them for a month.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"They were put into an old sports hall and we had to feed them every other day for over a month while the paperwork was being prepared," said Sergei Ryabtsov, who coordinated the rescue effort at Orenburg Pedagogical University.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"They ate cabbage, squash, fruit -- anything with high water content," he said.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Video footage released by the interior ministry showed the dilapidated sports hall overrun by the brown tortoises chomping on pieces of vegetables.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The university had experience in caring for smuggled tortoises: in 2016 its students had to feed over 8,000 of the reptiles in a similar situation.</p>.<p class="bodytext">After the paperwork was prepared and the tortoises were checked for parasites, they were transported in cardboard boxes and released in southern Kazakhstan.</p>
<p class="title">Russian border guards have seized more than 4,000 endangered wild tortoises after they were smuggled out of Kazakhstan, officials said.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Traffickers drove the 4,100 Central Asian tortoises, which are classed as globally vulnerable, across the border into Russia's Orenburg region in a trailer where they were disguised as cabbages, the interior ministry said Tuesday.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Their market value was estimated at 7.8 million rubles (about $117,000).</p>.<p class="bodytext">Investigators placed the reptiles under the care of a college in Orenburg, where students and staff fed them for a month.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"They were put into an old sports hall and we had to feed them every other day for over a month while the paperwork was being prepared," said Sergei Ryabtsov, who coordinated the rescue effort at Orenburg Pedagogical University.</p>.<p class="bodytext">"They ate cabbage, squash, fruit -- anything with high water content," he said.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Video footage released by the interior ministry showed the dilapidated sports hall overrun by the brown tortoises chomping on pieces of vegetables.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The university had experience in caring for smuggled tortoises: in 2016 its students had to feed over 8,000 of the reptiles in a similar situation.</p>.<p class="bodytext">After the paperwork was prepared and the tortoises were checked for parasites, they were transported in cardboard boxes and released in southern Kazakhstan.</p>