This is a neat development in
which a lost giant tortoise species haws been identified living within another
extant population in a nearby island. Restoring
the original population appears to be very promising here.
These giant tortoises were
central to the work of Charles Darwin and have certainly influenced every
biology student since. It is great to
discover that a lost page in that story is alive and well.
I do anticipate that the great
global mission of young biologists for the next two centuries will be the reclamation
of lost species on islands everywhere through recovering DNA and using
surrogate mothers. We can almost do this
now and will apparently soon recover the Pleistocene menagerie through exactly
this method.
Far easier may be the extraction
of DNA from more recently collected samples.
That is one thing the nineteenth century expansion of science did
accomplish, and every museum was filled with appropriate material.
Island refugia allow the creation
of pristine nurturing conditions for these efforts once you have removed the
imported nasties such as rats.
A few survivors of a giant Galapagos tortoise species thought to have
gone extinct in the 1840s may still exist on a volcanic island in the Pacific,
genetic analysis reveals.
By Claudio Ciof
A giant Galapagos tortoise species thought to have gone extinct may
still exist, genetic analysis reveals.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/environment/story/2012-01-06/galapagos-turtles-extinct/52467768/1
Researchers did DNA testing of 1,600 tortoises on
Isabela Island in the Galapagos and found at least 84 animals who were the
direct offspring of a different tortoise species from nearby Floreana Island
long believed gone.
"This is some of the most exciting news that I've seen for the
Galapagos in a long time," says Linda Cayot, science adviser to the
Galapagos Conservancy of Fairfax ,
Va. "To have a species that
was thought to be extinct in the middle of the 1800s come back is
amazing."
Galapagos giant tortoises are famous as one of the species that helped Charles Darwin develop
his theory of evolution. When he visited in 1835 Darwin
discovered that many of the islands in the remote Pacific islands west of Ecuador were
home to their own, distinct, tortoise species. Each differed slightly from
those on nearby islands. His theory of evolution helped explain how each
species had evolved to survive best in its home island.
One of the species he described was Chelonoidis elephantopus,
which lived on Floreana
Island . Within a decade
after his expedition left, whalers had killed them all off for food.
Now researchers have found DNA evidence that purebred Floreana
tortoises must be living on Isabela Island
among a population of its native Chelonoidis becki species. The
researchers think there could potentially be 38 or more of the Floreana among
an estimated 8,000 or so Isabela tortoises. Their paper is in Monday's
edition of the journal Current Biology.
The discovery dates back to 1994 when the same researchers took 60
blood samples from tortoises living on the sides of rocky and forbidding Wolf
volcano on Isabela. But what lay locked in the DNA of some of the samples was
surprising.
"We found some individuals that were so divergent genetically that
we called them 'aliens,' " says Adalgisa Caccone, an evolutionary
biologist at Yale University in New
Haven and senior author on the paper.
Years later, as techniques for doing DNA analysis improved, they did
tests of bone and shell from extinct Galapagos tortoise species kept in
museums, and discovered just where these "aliens" came from — now
tortoise-less Floreana Island.
The researchers believe that some of the tortoises taken by whalers
onboard their ships to be stored as food must have been dropped or escaped and
made their way to Isabela, which has no water source and so was never settled
by humans.
To find out for sure, this year one of the largest biological
expeditions in Galapagos history went back to Isabela, where 50 people spent
two weeks taking blood samples from 1,600 tortoises until they literally ran
out of sample tubes.
They took blood samples from 1,669 tortoises, about 20% of the island's
population.
Just in case you were wondering how you get blood from a 400 pound
tortoise, you flip it on its back and one or two strong people pull one of its
front legs out of its shell so a tiny blood sample can be taken from the
equivalent of the animal's elbow.
"Flipping them isn't so tricky, for that you use leverage. It's
getting their leg to extend that's hard," Caccone says. That can take two
grown men — these tortoises are strong, she says.
Returning to the lab, the researchers found that of the 1,669 samples,
84 were Floreana/Isabela hybrid individuals. And the matings were recent, at
least 30 of the hybrids were less than 15 years old.
"The only way these hybrids could be produced is if we had some
pure Floreana animals still alive on the island… because some of these
animals are hybrids which are first-generation crosses," Caccone says.
While it might seem unlucky that the researchers didn't find one of the
purebred individuals, "they were very lucky" to have found evidence
that they were there and reproducing, says Oliver Ryder at the University of
California San Diego's Center for Reproduction of Endangered Species.
The researchers plan to hold a workshop this year in the Galapagos to
discuss what can be done now and then send an expedition back in December of
2012 to look for the pure Floreana tortoises.
If pure blooded animals can be found "it's a no brainer:"
They'll be reintroduced to their home island of Floreana ,
Caccone says. If they can only find hybrids, a breeding program could be
created to back cross the hybrid animals to build up a population closer to
full-blooded Floreanas that could later be reintroduced to their long-ago home,
Caccone says.
The giant tortoises are crucial to the ecosystems of their islands,
Caccone says. For example, the highly endangered prickly pear cactus that grows
on them can only sprout after its seeds have gone through the gut of one of
them.
It's even possible that some of the Floreana tortoises living on
Isabela Island are the children of ones Darwin
saw, San Diego 's
Ryder says. These species are known to live to 100 and beyond, he says.
"The direct offspring of animals alive in 1840 could still be alive."
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