Apr. 4,
2013 — The turtle species Pelusios
seychellensis regarded hitherto as extinct never existed. Scientists
at the Senckenberg Research Institute in Dresden
discovered this based on genetic evidence. The relevant study was published
today in the journal PLOS ONE.
Turtles are
the vertebrates under the greatest threat. Among the approximately 320 turtle
species, the species confined to islands have been especially hard hit --
humans have caused the extinction of a whole number of species. One of them --
or at least it was thought so -- is the Seychelles mud turtle Pelusios seychellensis. Just three
specimens were collected at the end of the 19th century; they are still
kept at the Natural History Museum in Vienna and
the Zoological Museum
in Hamburg .
Despite an
intensive search for this species, which was declared as "extinct" by
the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), no further specimens
have been found since those in the 19th century. "Consequently, it
was assumed the species had been exterminated," says Professor Uwe Fritz,
director of the Museum of Zoology at the Senckenberg Natural History
Collections in Dresden .
The Dresden
biologist states quite clearly that this is not true. "We have examined
the DNA of the original specimen from the museum in Vienna and discovered that these turtles are
not a separate species."
The genetic
analyses have shown that this supposed Seychellois species is in reality
another species, Pelusios castaneus,
that is widespread in West Africa . "The
species Pelusios seychellensis has
therefore never existed," adds Fritz. "In fact, for a long time
researchers were amazed that the supposed Seychelles turtles looked so
deceptively similar to the West African turtles. But due to the great
geographic distance, it was thought this had to be a different species, which
is why the assumed Seychelles
turtles were also described as a new species in 1906."
The West
African mud turtle Pelusios castaneus
acquired an “extinct Doppelganger” from the Seychelles due to a scientific
error.
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