Posted on 03/14/2022 7:03:04 AM PDT by Red Badger
A new species of giant tortoise has been discovered in the Galapagos after DNA testing found animals living on one island had not yet been recorded, Ecuador's environment ministry said.
Researchers compared the genetic material of tortoises currently living on San Cristobal with bones and shells collected in 1906 from a cave in the island's highlands and found them to be different.
The 20th-century explorers never reached the lowlands northeast of the island, where the animals live today, and as a result, almost 8,000 tortoises correspond to a different lineage to what was previously thought.
"The species of giant tortoise that inhabits San Cristobal Island, until now known scientifically as Chelonoidis chathamensis, genetically matches a different species," the ministry said Thursday on Twitter.
Galapagos Conservancy said in a newsletter that the C. chathamensis species is "almost certainly extinct" and that the island had in fact been home to two different varieties of tortoise, one living in the highlands and another in the lowlands.
Located in the Pacific about 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) off the coast of Ecuador, the Galapagos Islands are a protected wildlife area and home to unique species of flora and fauna.
The archipelago was made famous by British geologist and naturalist Charles Darwin's observations on evolution there.
There were originally 15 species of giant tortoise on the islands, three of which became extinct centuries ago, according to the Galapagos National Park.
In 2019, a specimen of Chelonoidis phantastica was found on Fernandina Island more than 100 years after the species was considered extinct.
The study by researchers from Newcastle University in Britain, Yale in the United States, the American NGO Galapagos Conservancy and other institutions was published in the scientific journal Heredity.
They will continue to recover more DNA from the bones and shells to determine whether the tortoises living on San Cristobal, which is 557 kilometers long, should be given a new name.
A tortoise from crossing a phlorescent leech with an ordinary turtle?
I hope they’re happy together...
ISWYDT...................
To Patrick O’Brian fans, this tortoise sounds a lot like Testudo aubreii.
I saw them perform in an oldies show, so long ago now that it could have its own oldies show. :^)
Outdoors/Rural/wildlife/hunting/hiking/backpacking/National Parks/animals list please FR mail me to be on or off . And ping me is you see articles of interest.
If you were attentive, you would know that the depicted animal is not a turtle but a tortoise
Thurtles are not the topic. The topic is tortises
I’m not tortoiseologist nor have ever played one on TV.
Master and Commander should have let the doctor work on the island after he took down the French ship;)
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/at-190-jonathan-the-tortoise-is-the-worlds-oldest-living-land-animal-180979514/
PFFT!
Now that this lineage will be "protected", its numbers will plummet.
Darwin never sleeps!
That’s ingenious.
For those times when you need to plant a post turtle, but you have no post.
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