New Smithsonian Study Reveals Reduced Effectiveness of Translocation on Vulnerable North American Species
From Smithsonian's National Zoo & Conservation Biology Institute’s
Newsroom, May. 24, 2017
Four
years after conservationists relocated 570 desert tortoises (Gopherus
agassizii) in California from a threatened habitat to a new nearby
location, the tortoises outwardly appeared to have acclimated
successfully to the change. Genetic paternity testing of 92 hatchlings
by Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute (SCBI) geneticists,
however, has revealed that the translocated males are failing in one key
way—they are reproducing at a much, much lower rate than resident
males. The findings suggest that for some species, translocation may not
be as effective a tool to rescue populations at risk, or bolster
genetic diversity and health, as previously thought.
“The
fact that none of the hatchlings we tested were sired by a translocated
male tortoise is both unexpected and alarming,” said Kevin Mulder, a
graduate student in SCBI’s Center for Conservation Genomics and lead
author of the study, which was published in Biological Conservation
May 23. “Based on measures such as survival and health, the
translocated males seem to be doing fine, but when looking at their
ability to reproduce they strongly underperform compared to the local
males. Although we can only speculate on why this is happening, it is
clear that the translocation itself is having a larger impact on the
males than meets the human eye.”
Translocation
is a common conservation strategy used to increase gene flow between
populations and to move animals out of harm’s way in the case of habitat
loss. In 2008, SCBI field collaborators worked with the U.S. Army
National Training Center at Fort Irwin in the Mojave Desert to move 184
female tortoises, 293 males and 93 juveniles out of the way of the
expanding base and into nearby desert habitat that already had
tortoises. They put radio transmitters on both the translocated
tortoises and a smaller group of the resident tortoises to track the
effects of combining the two populations. This study is the first to use
genetic methods to look at whether males of a translocated population
are successfully reproducing and integrating their genes into a resident
group.
“It’s
much easier through observation to tell which females are successfully
reproducing, but only by genetic assignment are we able to get a real
handle on the reproductive success of the males,” said Robert Fleischer,
head of SCBI’s Center for Conservation Genomics and senior author on
the study. “These findings have important implications for the use of
translocation as a mitigation tool for the desert tortoise and perhaps
for other endangered species. It highlights the important role of
genetic tools in conservation, which we suggest should be considered any
time conservationists are doing a translocation.”
Unlike
the males, the female translocated tortoises reproduced successfully at
the same rate as the resident females. According to the paper’s
authors, there may be a few reasons that the translocated male tortoises
are failing to reproduce. They might have had to expend too much energy
on adjusting to the new environment, resulting in reduced vigor that
makes them less appealing to female residents. Or resident males may be
competitively excluding the new males from mating, although there is
considerable overlap of home ranges.
In
addition to confirming why translocated males are not breeding, the
researchers hope to repeat this study in the future to determine if
there has been any breeding improvement. In the meantime,
conservationists can use the results to consider the best options for
managing translocated desert tortoises, including the possibility of
relocating only females or breeding sets of tortoises before moving
them.
The
desert tortoise is a federally threatened species and listed as
vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red
List of Threatened Species. They range throughout the Mojave and Sonoran
deserts of the Southwestern United States, north and west of the
Colorado River. Their numbers have declined substantially since the
1950s as the result of continued habitat loss and predation.
The
paper’s other authors are Andrew Walde, Walde Research and
Environmental Consulting; William Boarman, Conservation Science and
Consultation; A. Peter Woodman, Kiva Biological Consulting; and Emily
Latch, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
SCBI
plays a leading role in the Smithsonian’s global efforts to save
species from extinction and train future generations of
conservationists. SCBI spearheads research programs at its headquarters
in Front Royal, Va., the Smithsonian’s National Zoo in Washington, D.C.,
and at field research stations and training sites worldwide. SCBI
scientists tackle some of today’s most complex conservation challenges
by applying and sharing what they learn about animal behavior and
reproduction, ecology, genetics, migration and conservation
sustainability.
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