Poulakakis Nikos, Glaberman Scott, Russello Michael, Beheregaray Luciano B, Ciofi Claudio, Powell Jeffrey R, Caccone Adalgisa
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Oct 7;105(40):15464-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0805340105. Epub 2008 Sep 22.
Giant tortoises, a prominent symbol of the Galápagos archipelago, illustrate the influence of geological history and natural selection on the diversification of organisms. Because of heavy human exploitation, 4 of the 15 known species (Geochelone spp.) have disappeared. Charles Darwin himself detailed the intense harvesting of one species, G. elephantopus, which once was endemic to the island of Floreana. This species was believed to have been exterminated within 15 years of Darwin's historic visit to the Galápagos in 1835. The application of modern DNA techniques to museum specimens combined with long-term study of a system creates new opportunities for identifying the living remnants of extinct taxa in the wild. Here, we use mitochondrial DNA and microsatellite data obtained from museum specimens to show that the population on Floreana was evolutionarily distinct from all other Galápagos tortoise populations. It was demonstrated that some living individuals on the nearby island of Isabela are genetically distinct from the rest of the island's inhabitants. Surprisingly, we found that these "non-native" tortoises from Isabela are of recent Floreana ancestry and closely match the genetic data provided by the museum specimens. Thus, we show that the genetic line of G. elephantopus has not been completely extinguished and still exists in an intermixed population on Isabela. With enough individuals to commence a serious captive breeding program, this finding may help reestablish a species that was thought to have gone extinct more than a century ago and illustrates the power of long-term genetic analysis and the critical role of museum specimens in conservation biology.
巨型陆龟是加拉帕戈斯群岛的一个显著象征,它展现了地质历史和自然选择对生物多样性的影响。由于人类的过度开发,已知的15个物种(陆龟属)中有4个已经消失。查尔斯·达尔文本人详细描述了对一种名为费尔南迪纳岛加拉帕戈斯象龟的大量捕猎,这种龟曾是弗洛雷纳岛的特有物种。据信,在达尔文1835年历史性访问加拉帕戈斯群岛后的15年内,这个物种就已灭绝。将现代DNA技术应用于博物馆标本,并结合对一个系统的长期研究,为识别野外已灭绝分类单元的现存残余个体创造了新机会。在这里,我们利用从博物馆标本中获取的线粒体DNA和微卫星数据,表明弗洛雷纳岛上的种群在进化上与所有其他加拉帕戈斯陆龟种群都不同。研究表明,附近伊莎贝拉岛上的一些现存个体在基因上与该岛其他居民不同。令人惊讶的是,我们发现这些来自伊莎贝拉岛的“非本地”陆龟有着最近的弗洛雷纳岛祖先血统,并且与博物馆标本提供的基因数据高度匹配。因此,我们表明费尔南迪纳岛加拉帕戈斯象龟的基因谱系并未完全灭绝,仍然存在于伊莎贝拉岛的一个混合种群中。由于有足够数量的个体来启动一个认真的圈养繁殖计划,这一发现可能有助于重新建立一个被认为在一个多世纪前就已灭绝的物种,并说明了长期基因分析的力量以及博物馆标本在保护生物学中的关键作用。