首页> 外文期刊>Biological Conservation >Risks of a late start to captive management for conservation: Phenotypic differences between wild and captive individuals of a viviparous endangered skink (Oligosoma otagense)
【24h】

Risks of a late start to captive management for conservation: Phenotypic differences between wild and captive individuals of a viviparous endangered skink (Oligosoma otagense)

机译:圈养管理迟到的风险:濒临灭绝的胎生子皮(Oligosoma otagense)的野生和圈养个体之间的表型差异

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Maintenance of demographically and genetically self-sustaining populations in captivity can assist conservation of threatened species. Captivity can, however, lead to changes in phenotype, though to date this issue has received little attention in reptiles. We compared phenotypic differences in the now critically-endangered Otago skink (Oligosoma otagense) between wild specimens (Otago, southern New Zealand) and in captivity (North Island). Individuals of this long-lived, viviparous species have been maintained up to three generations in captivity, primarily by private herpetoculturists, but increasingly there is interest in integrating management of captive stocks with conservation in situ. For the same snout-vent length, captive skinks pooled across three colonies had a significantly heavier body mass, wider tail base, longer tail (juveniles only), faster growth rate and much slower sprint speed than in the wild. Captive skinks also lacked ectoparasitic mites and haemogregarine parasites, and experienced warmer temperatures with probably greater access to food. Our study demonstrates the importance of not treating captive management for conservation as a tool of last resort. Important questions, if captive-raised animals are to be released to the wild, are is it better for released skinks to run swiftly or to be heavy-bodied, and what role does reinfestation with native parasites have in determining this balance? We also recommend genetic analysis and studbook management of captive stocks, research to determine implications of heavy body mass for reproduction in captivity, and production of at least some offspring for release inside larger enclosures within the local climate.
机译:保持人口和基因自给种群的人工饲养可以帮助保护濒危物种。圈养可以导致表型的改变,尽管迄今为止这个问题在爬行动物中很少受到关注。我们比较了野生标本(奥塔哥,新西兰南部)和人工饲养(北岛)之间现在极度濒危的奥塔哥石龙子(Oligosoma otagense)的表型差异。这种长寿的胎生物种的个体被圈养最多可维持三代,主要是由私人草皮学家进行的,但人们越来越关注将圈养种群的管理与就地保护结合起来。对于相同的口鼻长度,在三个菌落中聚集的圈养石龙鱼的体重显着增加,尾巴基部更宽,尾巴更长(仅少年),生长速度更快,冲刺速度也比野外慢。圈养的石龙子也缺乏外寄生螨和高血糖素体寄生虫,并且经历了较高的温度,可能获得了更多的食物。我们的研究表明,不将人工饲养管理作为保护的手段是很重要的。重要的问题是,如果要圈养饲养的动物放逐到野外,释放的石龙鱼会迅速奔跑还是变得身体强壮,以及对本地寄生虫的重新感染在确定这种平衡方面起什么作用?我们还建议对圈养种群进行遗传分析和螺柱簿管理,进行研究以确定沉重的体重对圈养繁殖的影响,并至少生产一些后代以在当地气候下的较大围栏中释放。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号