6/13/18, Mother Nature News
Saving a critically endangered
salamander requires a lot of people willing to get a little wet and slimy.
It also, apparently, takes nuns.
The Sisters of the Monastery of
the Dominican of Order in Pátzcuaro, Mexico, are working with Chester Zoo in
the United Kingdom and Michoacán University in Mexico to rebuild the population
of salamanders, which are found only in a lake near the nuns' monastery.
Saving a species
The salamanders (Ambystoma dumerilii) once thrived in
Lake Pátzcuaro, their only known home in the wild. Over the past century,
however, the introduction of exotic fish to the lake, the destruction of the
surrounding forest that altered the lake's shoreline and over-harvesting of the
salamanders for a specialty dish pushed the International Union for the
Conservation of Nature (IUCN) to
designate the salamander as critically endangered, with
perhaps only 100 individuals thought to exist in the wild.
While the Pátzcuaro salamander is
a different species than the axolotl,
another Mexican salamander that faces extinction, they certainly look alike.
This is in part because the Pátzcuaro salamander retains its larval
characteristics its whole life, like the axolotl. So both species sport frilly
gills and remain aquatic, feeding on insects and small fish.
The Chester Zoo has maintained
six breeding pairs of salamanders while another 30 adults are split between
Michoacán University and a Mexican government fisheries center. The nuns, whose
monastery is located at the edge of the lake, have maintained a genetically
diverse population of the salamanders for 150 years, and their population could
be the key to saving the species.
"After visiting Mexico in
2014, we had the unique opportunity to meet the nuns who are keeping the
species in their monastery," Gerardo Garcia, the zoo's curator of lower
vertebrates and invertebrates, said in a statement, "And we now believe
that the population they are looking after is one of the most genetically
viable populations in the world.
"The nuns deserve enormous
credit in keeping this species alive. Now, in partnership with the sisters, a
European network of zoos and the University of Michoacán in Mexico, we are
fighting to breed a thriving population for eventual reintroduction back into
the wild.”
Because the nuns have bred the
salamanders for over a century to produce a special cough medicine, they're
considered the experts in keeping the amphibians alive in captivity.
"I feel like they need our
care and protection," Sister Ofelia Morales Francisco told BBC News,
"and that is exactly what we're doing.”
Researchers have begun various
projects to ascertain the salamander population in the lake. They're using
traps to count the individuals, collecting skin samples to determine if the
salamanders in the lake have health issues, evaluating the lake's water quality
and making sure there's enough food in the lake for the salamanders — all steps
needed to ensure that reintroduced individuals will be able to survive in the
lake.
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