Authors
Evelyn L Jensen, Maud C Quinzin, Joshua M Miller, Michael A Russello, Ryan C Garrick, Danielle L Edwards, Scott Glaberman, Ylenia Chiari, Nikos Poulakakis, Washington Tapia, James P Gibbs, Adalgisa Caccone
Publication date
2022/4
Journal
Heredity
Volume
128
Issue
4
Pages
261-270
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Description
The Galapagos Archipelago is recognized as a natural laboratory for studying evolutionary processes. San Cristóbal was one of the first islands colonized by tortoises, which radiated from there across the archipelago to inhabit 10 islands. Here, we sequenced the mitochondrial control region from six historical giant tortoises from San Cristóbal (five long deceased individuals found in a cave and one found alive during an expedition in 1906) and discovered that the five from the cave are from a clade that is distinct among known Galapagos giant tortoises but closely related to the species from Española and Pinta Islands. The haplotype of the individual collected alive in 1906 is in the same clade as the haplotype in the contemporary population. To search for traces of a second lineage in the contemporary population on San Cristóbal, we closely examined the population by sequencing the mitochondrial control region …
Total citations
2022202312
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