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Recovered after an extreme bottleneck and saved by ex situ management: Lessons from the Alagoas curassow ( Pauxi mitu [Linnaeus, 1766]; Aves, Galliformes, Cracidae)

Authors :
Luís Fábio Silveira
Mariellen C. Costa
Mercival R. Francisco
James G. P. Simpson
Thiago da Costa Dias
Alberto Fonseca
Fernando J. M. Pinto
Roberto M. A. Azeredo
Source :
Zoo Biology. 40:76-78
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

A pivotal debate on biodiversity conservation is whether the scarce budgets must be invested in critically endangered taxa or in those with higher chances to survive due to larger population sizes. Addressing the fate of extremely bottlenecked taxa is an ideal way to test this idea, but empirical cases are surprisingly limited. The reintroduction of the extinct-in-the-wild Alagoas curassow (Pauxi mitu) by Brazilian scientists in September 2019 added to the two other known cases of survival to bottlenecks of only two or three individuals. We exploit the reasons why this species has survived, and we report how investments to rescue the Alagoas curassow resulted in the protection of many other taxa, suggesting that in the face of the dramatic number of extinctions expected for the Anthropocene, integration must prevail over a choice.

Details

ISSN :
10982361 and 07333188
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Zoo Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89d8d182a6309411880505e327ec4b54
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/zoo.21577