1. Recovery of a nearly extinct Galápagos tortoise despite minimal genetic variation
- Author
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Michel C. Milinkovitch, Ricardo Kanitz, Ralph Tiedemann, Washington Tapia, Fausto Llerena, Adalgisa Caccone, James P. Gibbs, and Jeffrey R. Powell
- Subjects
captive populations ,conservation biology ,conservation genetics ,Evolution ,QH359-425 - Abstract
Abstract A species of Galápagos tortoise endemic to Española Island was reduced to just 12 females and three males that have been bred in captivity since 1971 and have produced over 1700 offspring now repatriated to the island. Our molecular genetic analyses of juveniles repatriated to and surviving on the island indicate that none of the tortoises sampled in 1994 had hatched on the island versus 3% in 2004 and 24% in 2007, which demonstrates substantial and increasing reproduction in situ once again. This recovery occurred despite the parental population having an estimated effective population size
- Published
- 2013
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